Most Asian currencies firmed against the greenback on Thursday, led by the Thai baht and Malaysian ringgit, amid waning concerns about the economic impact of the Omicron coronavirus variant and a slowing Chinese factory-gate inflation. The Thai baht , the worst performing currency in the region, marked its third straight day in the black after it firmed 0.2% to 33.39 per dollar, its highest in two weeks. The Malaysian ringgit advanced slightly to a one-week peak. Indications that Omicron may not be as bad as feared and a slowing factory-gate inflation in China, Southeast Asia"s largest trading partner, supported risk appetite in the region. "This is fairly intuitive and expected in the context of (and exaggerated by) a harsh sell-off/risk off on Omicron last week, being met with encouraging news of early studies downplaying its severity and threat posed," analysts at Mizuho Bank said. BioNTech and Pfizer (PFE.N) said a three-shot course of their COVID-19 vaccine was able to neutralise Omicron in a laboratory test, an indication that booster shots could be key to protection against the variant. read more The U.S. dollar index edged up to 96.012, but traded near its one-week low as Omicron fears eased, pushing benchmark 10-year Treasury yields up. Meanwhile, China"s yuan weakened slightly to 6.3451 per dollar, but hovered near its more than three-year peak supported by a stronger yuan midpoint set by the People"s Bank of China as well as liquidity easing measures. "The recent easing measures by the People"s Bank of China spurred risk-on sentiment onshore, and could have contributed to this down-move in the USD/CNY," analysts at Singapore bank OCBC said in a note. "Going forward, expect to see a new range between 6.3300 and 6.3700 for the pair, with a downside bias. The rest of USD-Asia pairs are similarly heavy." In Southeast Asia, the Indonesian rupiah firmed 0.2% to hit its highest level this month. The 10-year benchmark bond yields slipped for a second day, down 8 basis points over the period after having risen nearly 20 basis points for two weeks amid the Omicron-fuelled volatility in the markets. Elsewhere, South Korea"s won appreciated 0.2% to hit an over five-week high, while Singapore dollar and the Philippine peso weakened 0.2% each. Most regional equities were up, with Singapore (.STI), Malaysia (.KLSE), Indonesia (.JKSE) and Thailand (.SETI) advancing between 0.3% and 1%. HIGHLIGHTS: ** Indonesian 10-year benchmark yields fall 4.3 basis points to 6.339%, extending losses from prior session ** China"s factory-gate inflation slows in November - read more ** Thai Nov consumer confidence at 7-month high amid reopening - read more Asia stock indexes and currencies at 0325 GMT COUNTRY FX RIC FX DAILY % FX YTD % INDEX STOCKS DAILY % STOCKS YTD % Japan -0.06 -9.22 (.N225) -0.15 5.01 China -0.02 +2.89 (.SSEC) 0.90 5.68 India 0.00 -3.16 (.NSEI) 0.00 24.95 Indonesia +0.06 -2.14 (.JKSE) 0.19 10.66 Malaysia +0.24 -4.58 (.KLSE) 0.20 -8.00 Philippines -0.09 -4.49 (.PSI) 0.61 0.72 S.Korea +0.20 -7.44 (.KS11) 0.54 5.03 Singapore -0.16 -3.07 (.STI) 0.30 10.39 Taiwan +0.21 +2.89 (.TWII) 0.24 21.34 Thailand +0.18 -10.30 (.SETI) -0.02 11.64 Reporting by Sameer Manekar in Bengaluru; Editing by Himani Sarkar Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
مشاركة :