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Bearish bets on Asian FX hit record highs as dollar rallies further:



© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: South Korean won, Chinese yuan and Japanese yen notes are seen on U.S. 100 dollar notes in this picture illustration taken in Seoul, South Korea, December 15, 2015. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo

By Harish Sridharan

(Reuters) – Bearish bets on several Asian currencies hit a record high, driven by a slump in the and a towering dollar as investors brace for more Federal Reserve rate hikes, a Reuters Poll found.

Short positions on the Chinese yuan, the South Korean won, the Singaporean dollar and the Taiwanese dollar all hit their highest levels on record, the fortnightly survey of 12 respondents showed.

The greenback’s surge has been relentless, with the — which measures the currency against six major peers — surging nearly 15% this year and hovering near a 20-year high.

The dollar is likely to strengthen further as U.S. interest rates are set to rise amid a stronger economic performance, and as investors turn to the safe-haven currency when geopolitical risks surface, such as the energy crisis in Europe.

Meanwhile, a slowing economy and a resurgence in COVID-19 infections across China have pressured the yuan, compounding misery on Asia’s emerging currencies reeling from widening interest rate differentials and high inflation.

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) has rolled out fresh policy measures aimed at stabilising the yuan’s rapid fall, including cutting the amount of foreign exchange reserves that financial institutions must hold to 6% from 8%.

“The PBOC cannot draw a line in the sand to decisively stem CNY pressures while a vehemently bullish USD (dollar) wave overwhelms,” said Vishnu Varathan, head of economics and strategy at Mizuho Bank in Singapore.

However, the yuan is arguably better placed to contain excessive volatility compared to other emerging market currencies, he added.

The ringgit recently touched its lowest since 1998, while the won is near levels not seen in over a decade. The Indian rupee and nd Philippine peso both recently slipped to their lowest-ever levels against the dollar.

Short bets on the Indonesian rupiah, one of the better performing currencies in the region this year, were at their highest since late-July after the country raised subsidised fuel prices by about 30% in an effort to rein in ballooning subsidies.

High energy subsidies had restrained Indonesia’s inflation, at 4.69% in August, allowing Bank Indonesia (BI) to delay raising interest rates until last month, well behind regional and global peers. But accelerating prices could now put pressure on BI to tighten monetary policy more quickly.

“Our base case scenario remains for BI to tighten the policy rate gradually with a 25 basis point hike in every meeting until it reaches 5.75% by mid next year,” analysts at Goldman Sachs (NYSE:) said in a research note.

“However, there is risk of a more aggressive BI should core inflation surge in response to this price hike or if the IDR depreciates significantly.”

Emerging market…



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