We are told today told that rising food and energy prices have been wreaking havoc to some emerging market balance sheets and thus have "caused" the fall in the respective currencies.
Courtesy of Danske Bank
As we commented earlier, we are not persuaded with this argument because it seems to gloss over the other side of the trade-if emerging markets are expanding liabilities for social safety nets in face of “higher inflation”, have not the US likewise been throwing money at its financial markets in order to “reflate” the economy?
USD/Yuan courtesy of yahoo
We might be charged with the cognitive bias of “clustering illusions” or looking for pattern where there is none, BUT it does seem that the price actions of the Korean Won, Indonesia’s Rupiah and the Philippine Peso appears to have coincided with the movements of the Chinese Yuan, as we earlier argued at Driver Of The Philippine Peso: Available Bias, Oil or the China’s Yuan?.
The chart above shows that last September’s speed bump of the Yuan was nearly in consonance with the spike in the USD/WON, USD/PHP and USD/INR.
Today as the Yuan seemed to have paused from advancing against the US dollar, the aforementioned currencies lost meaningful ground.
USD Index courtesy of stockcharts.com
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