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Philippine Peso’s Best Run in Six Years Is Under Threat

Peso Rally Faces Threat as Philippine Inflation Forecast to Slow

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The Philippine peso’s longest run of quarterly gains in six years will be tested this week with a report forecast to show inflation resumed its downtrend in June.

Evidence consumer-price gains are cooling raises the prospect the central bank will follow up on its May interest-rate cut to support flagging growth. Technical indicators also suggest the peso may struggle to extend gains, with the currency approaching resistance levels based on Fibonacci analysis.

The peso has strengthened more than 6% from a 13-year low set in October, with gains fueled by the central bank raising its benchmark rate by a combined 175 basis points to 4.75% in November. The currency touched a 16-month high in June after Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas defied predictions for a second rate cut by maintaining a “prudent pause” at its June 20 meeting.

Philippine Peso’s Best Run in Six Years Is Under Threat

The pause will allow policy makers to “observe and assess” the impact of May’s easing, as well as phased reductions in the central bank’s reserve requirement ratio, central bank Governor Benjamin Diokno said at the meeting.

The decision to keep policy on hold came after data showed inflation unexpectedly quickened for the first time in eight months in May. If economists are right about June’s data, the uptick was only transitory. Friday’s report will show inflation slowed to 2.8% in June from 3.2%, according to economists’ forecasts, staying in the central bank’s 2% to 4% target range.

Consumer prices probably rose 2.2%-3% in June from a year earlier, the central bank said Friday. Lower rice and domestic oil prices, a downward adjustment in electricity rates and recent peso strength kept inflation in check, it said.

Still, even if price pressures ease, there’s no guarantee policy makers will decide to cut rates again -- which means further peso gains are not out of the question.

Technical Signals

Technical indicators are suggesting any further downside in the dollar-peso currency pair will be limited. The exchange rate is approaching Fibonacci support at 51.139, the 23.5% retracement of its rally from 2013 to 2018. Additional support can be found around 51.00, a long-term bull trendline.

Slow stochastics, a momentum indicator, are also in oversold territory, suggesting the decline could slow, at least in the short term.

Below are key Asian economic data and events due:

  • Monday, July 1: Japan 2Q Tankan survey, manufacturing PMI and consumer confidence, RBNZ’s Bascand speaks, China Caixin manufacturing PMI, Indonesia CPI, South Korea trade balance, Thailand CPI and business sentiment
  • Tuesday, July 2: RBA rate decision and Gov. Lowe speaks, New Zealand building permits, South Korea CPI
  • Wednesday, July 3: Australia building approvals and trade balance, New Zealand house prices, Japan services PMI and BOJ’s Funo speaks, China Caixin services PMI
  • Thursday, July 4: Australia retail sales, South Korea BoP current-account balance, Malaysia trade balance
  • Friday, July 5: Philippines CPI, India’s FY20 budget

To contact the reporter on this story: David Finnerty in Singapore at dfinnerty4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tan Hwee Ann at hatan@bloomberg.net, Liau Y-Sing, Nicholas Reynolds

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