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Virus Forces Nomura to Rethink Bets on Low-Yield Currencies

Published 02/06/2020, 11:45 AM
Updated 02/06/2020, 12:30 PM
Virus Forces Nomura to Rethink Bets on Low-Yield Currencies
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The rapidly-spreading coronavirus has prompted Nomura Holdings Inc. to flip some of its top currency calls for 2020 just a month into the year.

Japan’s biggest securities firm recommends long-dollar positions against Thailand’s baht and the Chinese yuan. Back in December, shorting the greenback versus these low-yielding Asian currencies was among its top trades for this year. Nomura is also advising selling the Singapore dollar against a basket of its trading partners.

The shift comes as investor optimism over improving U.S.-China trade relations and a nascent recovery in global growth has been replaced by fears about the economic impact of the viral outbreak. The baht, won and Singapore dollar are taking the biggest hit as measures to stem the spread of the disease disrupt trade, tourism and supply chains worldwide.

“It was about low yielders outperforming in December,” said Craig Chan, Nomura’s global head of FX strategy in Singapore. “It’s kind of shifting and most currencies linked to China are suffering. There are lot of currencies in the low-yielding space which are looking to break key levels.”

The epidemic has jeopardized China’s economic recovery, with scores of millions of citizens barred from travel, and companies, factories and retail outlets shuttered for a period of weeks. The death toll has risen to 563.

Nomura had in December predicted the offshore yuan to strengthen to 6.89 per dollar by the end of March. It forecast the won to reach 1,150 and the baht to advance to 29.7 against the greenback. The currencies were trading at 6.9706, 1,183.40 and 31.078, respectively, on Thursday.

High Yielders

While Indonesia’s rupiah and India’s rupee -- two of emerging Asia’s highest-yielding currencies -- have outperformed their peers so far this year, Chan isn’t buying them just yet.

READ: Rupiah Bonds Top in Asia Boosted by Central Bank’s Debt Buys

“It’s really about observing the intensity of this viral outbreak,” he said. “We may go into high-yielders like India and Indonesia once the global external backdrop begins to stabilize a bit.”

A potential “V-shaped recovery” from the virus impact will provide scope for Nomura to reinstate its trades on low-yielders in the future, Chan said.

Overall, Chan expects Asian currencies to be weighed down by the risk of regional central banks turning toward more easing to counter a hit to their economies from the coronavirus.

The People’s Bank of China cut some interest rates Monday and injected massive liquidity into the financial system to shore up slumping markets, while the Bank of Thailand lowered its benchmark rate to a record low on Wednesday.

READ: Brace for a Surprise Rate Cut From BOK, Insurer Says

(Updates prices, adds comment on central banks in the penultimate paragraph.)

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