Photo: intpolicydigest.org

On Thursday (20 Feb), the Singapore dollar (SGD) dropped to 1.40 against the USD amidst the increasing fears about recession as well as the new reported cases of Covid-19 which appears to stabilise in China but springing more in other parts of the world.

Peter China, the FX strategies for United Overseas Bank opined that SGD’s weakening on Thursday was concurrent with the general weakness in Asian currencies caused by fears of the Covid-19 outbreak.

Generally speaking, the Asia Dollar Index has reached its lowest levels in more than two months as shown by the value dropping to 103.50.

Mr Chia noted that “the USD/SGD move from 1.35 to 1.40 in the past month has been one of the steepest climbs in recent years.”

Compared to the end of 2019 at 1.35 level, the affected SGD has dropped 3.9 per cent. Among other currencies too, SGD is one of the worst performers ranked at 16th out of 20. The only currencies with worse performance compared to Singapore were Australian dollar, Thai baht and New Zealand dollar.

Philip Wee, the FX strategist for DBS Bank remarked that the Covid-19 outbreak  has impacted in ways US-China trade war has not. Mr Wee prediction in May 2019 was for the SGD to depreciate to 1.40 by Q3 of 2019.

In February, the SGD nominal effective exchange rate (NEER) has weakened to the lower half of its policy band. This is due to the Covid-19 epidemic and the Singapore government has warned of an impending recession this year, Mr Wee added.

On Monday (17 Feb), the official growth forecast for 2020 was downgraded from 0.5-2.5 per cent to the range between -0.5 per cent and 1.5 per cent.

Mr Wee also stressed that “Covid-19 has not only delayed the recovery from the Phase One trade deal signed in mid-January but also broadened the economic weakness into domestic demand, for example tourism and retail sales,” and that the government expect the impact to be more severe than Sars in 2003.

During the Sars epidemic, real GDP growth had been 6.1 per cent in Q4 2002 after which it had dropped to -0.3 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) in Q2 2003. After this, due to China’s post-World Trade Organisation ascension, real GDP growth bounced back up.

Mr Wee commented that “unfortunately, China’s economy is still slowing amid an ongoing trade war today. Unless Covid-19 stabilises quickly in Q1 and does not extend into Q2, the door remains open for a shift to a neutral or zero appreciation stance at the next SGD policy review in April.”

Added to this, since the beginning of 2020, the Japanese yen has weakened 2.8 per cent against the USD, thus making chipping away the currency’s appeal as safe-haven. Japan has also reported the most coronavirus cases outside of China. After a sales tax increase in October 2019, which led to a recession in Q4 2019 on quarter, Japan is expected to experience negative growth in future quarters due to Covid-19 outbreak.

Since the end of last year, the euro currency has fallen 3.8 per cent, which suggests a possible contraction in Europe due to increasing recessionary risks, Mr Wee remarked.

In the past several weeks, SGD has shown rapid movements amidst the technical resistance at 1.41, but Mr Wee cautions against a strong rebound.

Some market watchers recalled the V-shaped recovery like the case of Sars in 2003. At the time, China experienced 10 per cent growth, Mr Wee noted as “China’s long-term potential growth is moving to below 5 per cent”. Last year, China’s growth was around six per cent.

Most of the weakness seen in SGD is due to the expectations of monetary policy easing by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) in April as well as the expected slowdown in growth in Q1 of 2020, UOB’s Mr Chia opined, assuming that Covid-19 outbreak does not worsen even more.

Mr Chia further noted that “moving forward, assuming that new Covid-19 cases peak in late-April to early-May, a growth rebound in the second quarter of 2020 may spur a recovery of the SGD towards 1.37 by the end of the second quarter”.

OCBC Bank currency economist Terence Wu opined that the costs to the economy from the Covid-19 outbreak have to be quantified even after the situation improves.

“Thus, there may still be considerable uncertainty on the macro front for Singapore and the rest of Asia. On the flip side, economic prints in the US has been more resilient than expected since the start of the year, and the improvement in growth momentum is not showing signs of slowing down…From a relative macro perspective, the USD should be favoured against the SGD and the Asian currencies on a multi-week horizon.” Mr Wu concluded.

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

Koufu F&B owned by grassroots leader outsourced hawker centre dishwashing to brother’s company at $64k/mth

It was earlier reported that a feud has broken out between some…

亚细安多年建设性努力严重受挫 方荣发冀对缅军政府态度需强硬

随着缅甸军人领袖发动政变夺回政权,东盟诸国多年来建设性的努力也严重受挫。 尽管已卸下议员职务,工人党前后港议员方荣发仍关心国内外局势,看到缅甸修女不忍看到伤亡,向全副武装警员下跪,也令他对这个亚细安盟国的前景感揪心。 他认为,东盟诸国理应拿出骨气,与其他民主国家一同透过强烈言词,或是合作制裁等形式,谴责缅甸军政府发动的政变,并停止杀害当地手无寸铁平民。 回溯2007年,缅甸也曾发生反军政府示威,方荣发曾撰文要求,停止任何形式的军售给缅军政府。他也提醒,新加坡是紧随中国和泰国之后,缅甸的第三大进口伙伴,绝对有能力对军政府施加压力。 当时,时任外长杨荣文曾指出,新加坡多年来对缅甸出售的国防产品并不多,且限制在“不适合反击群众抗命”的产品;也会依循联合国对缅的制裁措施。 时至今日,方荣发认为,自己对缅甸军政府的立场仍未改变。他甚至提起,2009年当时任缅甸总理登盛将军访新加坡,还把一种石斛兰以他的名字命名。“饶了我吧!” “花朵是爱、和平、缅怀和珍惜的有力象征,肯定缅甸军政府所有一切都和这些沾不上边。” 他指出,1990年,缅甸军人领袖拒绝和平移交权力;2007年僧侣和平示威的血腥冲突,以及2008年,面对纳尔吉斯飓风灾害拖延救援灾黎。 “我由衷希望这次亚细安诸国能拿出骨气,联合自由世界谴责近期缅甸发生的军事政变,透过强烈言辞和协作制裁,停止滥杀那里的无辜百姓,为这个国家和本区域恢复和平。”  

维文出访马国”稻乡“吉打与槟城

新加坡外交部长维文于今明两日,出访马来西亚吉打和槟城两个州属,重申新加坡与吉打长期友好关系,并放眼拓展双边合作,包括促进两地之间政府官员、商界领袖和青年的交流。 根据外交部官方文告,维文昨早会晤吉打苏丹端姑沙烈胡丁、王储东姑沙拉弗丁、州务大臣慕克力和吉打行政议员等人。 维文也邀请吉打苏丹和慕克力前来新加坡进行访问。 此后,他与吉打行政议员共进下午茶,了解当地经济和工业发展计划,并相信两地之间可做得更多,并期许可启动更多的交流。 维文昨日在脸书分享,新加坡和马国各个州属,在各领域都有联系,希望能重申和这些地方悠久历史、在经济上以及人与人之间的联系。 另一方面,他也前往槟城大山脚拜访安华长女,巴东埔国会议员努鲁依莎。 有“烈火莫熄”公主之称的努鲁依莎,在今年三月抛下震撼弹,直言对希盟政府改革缓慢感到失望,也表明来届选举将不参选。 她已担任了三届国会议员。但是他在去年12月12月辞去公正党副主席和槟城州主席职务后,再于昨天宣布辞去国会公共账目委员会成员一职。