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Asia's Worst Currency Is in Taiwan as Foreign Funds Depart

Asia's Worst Currency Is in Taiwan as Foreign Funds Depart

(Bloomberg) -- Taiwan’s currency has gone from the dullest to the worst in Asia amid an outflow of overseas cash as the trade war undermines the outlook for the island’s dominant tech sector.

The Taiwan dollar has tumbled 1.4% in the past five days, the biggest loss among regional peers and and second-worst in the world after the Colombian peso. Foreign funds have sold more than $2 billion of local equities in May, the biggest outflows in Asia, as the U.S. administration targeted China’s Huawei Technologies Co. and a slump in the yuan pressured other exporter currencies. It closed 0.2% lower Wednesday at 31.53 a dollar, the weakest in more than two years.

"The Taiwan dollar may drop below the 32 level in the coming weeks before it stabilizes,” said Gao Qi, a currency strategist at Scotiabank in Singapore. “Foreign outflows are likely to continue amid concerns that the trade war won’t be resolved any time soon.”

Taiwan’s currency -- which traded in a narrow range for most of the year -- is yet another casualty of the trade dispute between China and the U.S. The losses accelerated just as the focus shifted to China’s technology firms and their vast supply chain. It’s particularly painful for Taiwan’s equity market as four out of its ten biggest firms supply Huawei. Investors who pull out of local equities also dump the local currency.

Asia's Worst Currency Is in Taiwan as Foreign Funds Depart

Before the Huawei news, the Taiwan dollar had the smallest price swings among 31 major currencies tracked by Bloomberg, excluding the pegged Hong Kong dollar. The options market shows traders expect the swings will increase, with one-week implied volatility surging to the highest since November on Monday.

The currency could soon test 31.80 a dollar as a support level, the upper limit of a breakout gap seen in January 2017, according to Christopher Wong, a senior FX strategist at Malayan Banking Bhd. He expects the decline will continue as the market is more driven by bearish sentiment now.

To contact the reporters on this story: Cindy Wang in Taipei at hwang61@bloomberg.net;Chinmei Sung in Taipei at csung4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Sofia Horta e Costa at shortaecosta@bloomberg.net, Magdalene Fung

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