The three economies fell off the radar screens of global investors after the 1997 Asian financial crisis. The rise of
Not any longer. Leading stock market indices in all three countries have almost doubled in the past two years, even as their currencies weakened or underperformed those of their powerful neighbors
Analysts now say it's time for the Southeast Asian currencies to play catch up with, or even outrun, their northern rivals to reflect an improvement in their economies and the confidence investors have shown in the region's companies.
"Our indicators are pointing to an outperformance of the Southeast Asian currencies in the coming months and a stalling of the (north Asian) currencies," said Philip Wee, strategist at
"Although the dollar looks weak, it's difficult to squeeze out more from north Asian currencies. So the path of least resistance is
The central banks have largely stayed out of the currency markets in the past few months even as their counterparts in
Some analysts say this intervention could well continue as demand for
With that kind of growth, Claudio Piron, a currency strategist at JP Morgan Chase, expects the baht to outperform all other Asian currencies, except the
"The expected resilience of the baht is explained by two key drivers: an upturn in the domestic investment cycle and continued global growth."
He predicts the baht, already at a 4-1/2-year high, will firm almost 5% to 36.8 per dollar by the end of the year despite losses suffered by
The tsunami wreaked most devastation on
The inflows, coupled with the new government's stepped-up efforts to lure back foreign direct investors, are helping to show the rupiah in a new light.
"I particularly like
Doubtless, Southeast Asian nations are far from solving their deep-rooted problems -- widespread poverty, lack of pricing power overseas because of their reliance on low-value-added exports, endemic corruption and bottlenecks to investment.
"I'm long on the baht but I'm not a structural bull for rupiah or the peso," said Bhanu Baweja, a strategist at UBS.
While Baweja agrees that the rupiah and the peso are both undervalued, he does not expect them to outperform because foreign investments are not strong enough. The currencies could get hurt once the
In the case of the
The peso, the best-performing Asian currency so far in 2005, may benefit further from pledges by Chinese firms to invest $1.6 billion in the country's mining industries and from a $1 billion bond that the government plans to price on Wednesday, said Irene Cheung, head of Asian currency strategy at ABN AMRO Bank.
She said stock investors had noted the new optimism about
Indonesia's key stock index powered ahead this month to record highs, the Philippine index raced to a five-year high and the Thai stock market benchmark rose to a nine-month high.
"The baht and the peso, two of our favorite currencies, continue to benefit from equity inflows," said Cheung. -- Reuters
The Prudent Investor Says…
I have been writing about this ‘regional currency impetus’ since the last semester of last year. Today, the unfolding developments in favor of the domestic currency are being carried by the mainstream media, which should provide for a psychological boost and reaffirm the emerging trend. And as I have written before, expect capital flows to the domestic economy to accelerate as the trend becomes entrenched.
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