logo
Ringgit eases against US dollar amid cautious market sentiment

Ringgit eases against US dollar amid cautious market sentiment

New Straits Times16 hours ago
KUALA LUMPUR: The ringgit closed easier against the US dollar on Monday, tracking the performance of its regional peers, as market sentiment remained extremely guarded while the foreign exchange market navigated a period of economic uncertainties.
At 6 pm, the local note weakened to 4.2505/2560 against the greenback from last Friday's close of 4.2475/2525.
Bank Muamalat Malaysia Bhd chief economist Dr Mohd Afzanizam Abdul Rashid said the ringgit initially appreciated against the US dollar in the morning session to RM4.2455 but later stabilised at around RM4.25 in the afternoon.
"Asian currencies were also generally weak against the US dollar. The US tariffs continue to hog the limelight as the Donald Trump administration maintained its hawkish stance towards the European Union and Mexico with 30 per cent tariffs.
"At the same time, Trump's frustration with Russia over the Ukraine war suggests that the fighting could prolong. Trump has indicated that his administration will send Patriot missiles to Ukraine to help it defend against Russia's missile attacks," he said.
Brent crude oil is currently trading above US$70 per barrel.
At the close, the ringgit was traded mostly higher against a basket of major currencies.
It strengthened against the British pound to 5.7305/7379 from 5.7524/7592, improved against the Japanese yen to 2.8858/8897 from 2.8893/8929 but traded marginally lower versus the euro to 4.9693/9757 from 4.9679/9737.
The local note also trended mostly higher against ASEAN currencies.
The ringgit traded slightly higher vis-à-vis the Singapore dollar at 3.3184/3229 from 3.3186/3228, improved against the Indonesian rupiah to 261.5/262.0 from 261.8/262.3 previously, and strengthened versus the Philippine peso at 7.50/7.51 from 7.52/7.53.
But, it dropped against the Thai baht to 13.1213/1439 from 13.0668/0886 from Friday's close.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Alibaba to Baidu lead surge in equity-linked bond sales in Asia
Alibaba to Baidu lead surge in equity-linked bond sales in Asia

Malaysian Reserve

time36 minutes ago

  • Malaysian Reserve

Alibaba to Baidu lead surge in equity-linked bond sales in Asia

ASIAN sales of bonds that can be turned into shares have soared in 2025, heading toward multiyear highs, as interest rates remain elevated and rallying stocks create the right conditions for this corner of the market to thrive. Led by Chinese companies, firms in the region have sold more than $30 billion of convertible and exchangeable bonds this year, up from over $20 billion in the same period a year earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Offerings denominated in US and Hong Kong dollars have been particularly popular. Concerns about inflation from US tariffs have kept Federal Reserve officials from cutting rates, making instruments such as convertibles that pay little, or even no interest, more attractive for borrowers. For investors, these hybrid securities offer a way to ride the recent rally in Chinese stocks — with limited downside. 'It's been an extraordinarily busy year and it will continue to be busy,' said Gautam Sareen, head of Asia Pacific equity linked and private capital markets at JPMorgan Chase & Co. 'Market conditions have never been healthier.' Demand has been so high for equity-linked securities that all of Asia's five largest issuances in this space didn't have to pay any interest. China's Baidu Inc., Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Ping An Insurance (Group) Co. of China Ltd. were among the biggest issuers of these hybrid instruments this year. Baidu raised $2 billion from the sale of notes exchangeable into shares of online-travel agent Group Ltd., while Alibaba sold HK$12 billion ($1.5 billion) of bonds that can be turned into shares of Alibaba Health Information Technology Ltd., following other issuers in taking advantage of the lower funding costs in the Hong Kong dollar compared to the greenback. Ping An raised almost HK$12 billion from its convertible. China's stock market 'felt quite solid right after Liberation Day and then rebounded very, very quickly,' said Brian Chau, co-head of equity-linked Asia at UBS Group AG. 'The APAC market is at a record strength.' Elsewhere, Grab Holdings Ltd. and MakeMyTrip Ltd. also had a big offerings, as did ailing carmaker Nissan Motor Co., which recently raised ¥200 billion ($1.4 billion) from one of Japan's biggest convertible bonds in years. In South Korea, LG Chem Ltd.'s $1 billion exchangeable bond in May revived a market that had dried up in the country in the wake of a 2023 short-selling ban that was only lifted few months ago. And although a flare-up of tensions on the geopolitical front or a negative shock for the global economy could shut the issuance window quickly, expectations remain high for offerings to keep flooding in. Saurabh Dinakar, head of Asia Pacific global capital markets at Morgan Stanley, said that DeepSeek's sudden emergence as an artificial-intelligence powerhouse and Chinese companies' low valuations helped kickstart the rally earlier this year, and the outlook remains bright. Investors now feel that valuations in China are 'at a bit of an inflection point and as a result they are wanting to get involved and engage in certain sectors,' Dinakar said. 'Assuming that we don't have a wobble from a geopolitical standpoint, our view is that the market will remain active for the balance of the year.' –BLOOMBERG

US probes drones and polysilicon imports, opening door to tariffs
US probes drones and polysilicon imports, opening door to tariffs

New Straits Times

time41 minutes ago

  • New Straits Times

US probes drones and polysilicon imports, opening door to tariffs

WASHINGTON: The United States has opened investigations into imports of drones and their components, alongside those of polysilicon — an important material for solar power — in moves that could bring about new tariffs. The probes launched July 1 by the US Commerce Department are the latest in a series of such actions under President Donald Trump's administration, looking into the effects such imports have on national security. The United States has also launched similar investigations into imports of semiconductors, pharmaceuticals and other goods. The probes take place under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, the same authority Trump has used to slap steep tariffs on imports of steel and aluminium. Typically, such actions take months to conclude, and they could result in fresh levies if officials deem it necessary to safeguard national security. In a pair of documents scheduled for publication in the Federal Register on Wednesday, the US government called for public comment on the new investigations. One of them is focused on "imports of polysilicon and its derivatives," while the other centres on "imports of unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) and their parts and components." While the documents do not name any countries, Chinese drone maker DJI dominates the global consumer market, and Beijing is also a major player in the world's solar supply chain. Trump's tariffs targeting various sectors are separate from those he has imposed on imports from different countries. Since returning to the White House in January, Trump's sweeping tariffs have roiled financial markets and triggered fears of an economic downturn. In April, he slapped a 10 per cent levy on goods from almost all US trading partners. The duties are set to increase for dozens of economies come Aug 1, while trade negotiations continue as partners try to strike deals to avert the higher levies.

Investors brace for Japan bond market blowout as national election nears
Investors brace for Japan bond market blowout as national election nears

New Straits Times

time42 minutes ago

  • New Straits Times

Investors brace for Japan bond market blowout as national election nears

TOKYO: Japanese government bond investors are bracing for a potential power shift in upper house elections this weekend that could strain the country's already frail finances, with long-term yields soaring to multi-decade highs as the vote nears. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's rapidly sliding popularity suggests even his modest goal of retaining a majority is unachievable, with a new opinion poll from national broadcaster NHK handing the ruling Liberal Democratic Party its lowest score since its return to power in 2012. Defeat in Sunday's vote could bring anything from a shift in the composition of the coalition to Ishiba's resignation, though even the least disruptive scenario is still expected to see more stimulus-minded political viewpoints gain sway. The benchmark 10-year JGB yield climbed to the highest since October 2008 at 1.60 per cent on Tuesday. The 20- and 30-year bonds had yet to trade as of 0039 GMT, but a day earlier, the former soared to the highest since October 2000 at 2.63 per cent while the latter leapt 13 basis points to put it at 3.17 per cent, just shy of an all-time peak. "As the noise towards yet more fiscal spending picks up, we have increased our underweight in Japan as a whole," said Ales Koutny, head of international rates at Vanguard. "Japan is going down a similar path as the UK did a couple of years ago," Koutny said. "If no fiscal restraint, then the bond market will start to put pressure on the economy." Japan's debt burden is the highest in the developed world at about 250 per cent of GDP. Concerns about promises of fiscal largesse from opposition parties backing tax cuts were instrumental in sending so-called superlong JGB yields to record peaks in late May, with the 30-year yield hitting 3.19 per cent and the 40-year yield surging to 3.68 per cent. The Ministry of Finance was able to restore some calm to the market with plans to reduce issuance of 20-, 30- and 40-year bonds to address a supply-demand imbalance for those tenors, after traditional demand from life insurers dropped sharply this year. The Bank of Japan's reticence to raise interest rates further against an uncertain global economic backdrop is also keeping investors sidelined. "If such a demand-less market continues and investors foresee no rate hikes within this fiscal year, JGB volatility will go up, especially in the long end," said Kentaro Hatono, a fund manager at Asset Management One, who says he's adopting a "wait-and-see" stance due to the risks of the yield curve steepening after the election outcome. Barclays calculates that the rise in 30-year yields currently factors in about a three percentage-point cut to Japan's 10 per cent consumption tax rate. "Even if the ruling parties retain their majority in the upper house, they would still be unable to pass budget bills, including the upcoming supplementary budget, without the cooperation of the opposition parties," the bank's Japan-based analysts wrote in a research note. "In this context, we believe there will likely be a convergence toward an expansionary budget proposal." All three of the leading opposition parties espouse some form of consumption tax cuts, with the populist, right-wing Sanseito party proposing a phasing out of VAT altogether. The policy has gained sway with the public as well: a recent poll by the Asahi newspaper showed 68 per cent of voters thought a sales tax cut was the best way to cushion the blow from rising living costs. Fiscally hawkish Ishiba has eschewed that option in favour of cash handouts. A poor election result for the ruling coalition will trigger a sell-off in super-long JGBs by so-called real money investors, including life insurers and institutional investors, predicts Toshinobu Chiba, a fund manager at Simplex Asset Management. "If the opposition parties win, the government deficit will see a huge expansion," Chiba said. "The JGB yield curve will steepen by a lot."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store