
Asia FX mixed; ringgit extends decline on weak growth outlook
Malaysia's currency fell as much as 0.5% to 4.313 per US dollar while equities dropped 1%.
The Southeast Asian country's economy expanded by 4.4% in the first quarter, data showed Friday, slowing from the previous quarter.
The central bank flagged a dimmer outlook as persistent trade tensions weighed on consumer spending and investment.
Analysts at Citi described the data as dovish and said it may bring the central bank closer to a 25-basis-point rate cut in the second half of the year.
Elsewhere in the region, the Thai baht led gains among Asian currencies, while the Taiwan dollar and Singapore dollar also edged higher.
The Indonesian rupiah fell 0.4% while the Philippine peso was more or less unchanged.
The US dollar softened in early Asia trade, after a sharp 0.6% advance last week, with Moody's surprise downgrade intensifying concerns around the country's bloating debt pile.
'While there was some relief from the temporary pause in US-China tariffs, Moody's downgrade of US credit rating has added a layer of uncertainty,' said Mohit Mirpuri, an equity fund manager with SGMC Capital.
Malaysia's ringgit leads Asian FX losses ahead of BNM rate decision
Data from Thailand showed gross domestic product grew more than expected during the first quarter but the state planning agency lowered its annual forecasts on lingering worries over the country's export-focussed economy.
The Bank of Thailand had downplayed the chances of more rate cuts last week despite a worsening economic outlook from trade concerns, challenges stemming from an aging population, low productivity, and high household debt.
Equity markets were downbeat in emerging Asia while Chinese shares pared some losses after China's industrial output grew faster than anticipated in April.
Underwhelming economic data out of China underscored the mounting challenges for the economy posed by its ongoing trade spat with the US.
US equity futures dipped as global markets continued to assess the fallout from Moody's credit action.
Stocks in Thailand and Singapore fell 0.2% and 0.2% respectively.
Shares in Taiwan and South Korea fell 1.2% each.
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