Bank Muamalat Malaysia Bhd chief economist Afzanizam Rashid said the US Federal Reserve’s (Fed) decision to cut the Fed Funds Rate (FFR) by 25 basis points played a crucial role in fostering confidence that the Fed is committed to easing its monetary policy.
He said this could narrow the gap between the FFR and Malaysia’s overnight policy rate (OPR).
“Such a notion was reinforced by Bank Negara Malaysia’s Monetary Policy Committee decision yesterday to keep the OPR steady at 3% and reiterated their assessment of the impact from key policy changes that could result in higher inflation in 2025,” he told Bernama.
Afzanizam also pointed out that such optimism has boosted the ringgit, enabling it to trade higher against some major currencies.
At 6pm, the local currency rose to 4.3800/4.3850 versus the greenback from yesterday’s close of 4.4020/4.4065.
At the close, the ringgit had mostly strengthened against a basket of major currencies.
It inched up against the British pound to 5.6765/5.6830 from yesterday’s close of 5.6821/5.6879 and improved marginally against the euro to 4.7212/4.7266 from 4.7317/4.7365.
However, it inched down against the Japanese yen to 2.8763/2.8798, from 2.8597/2.8629 yesterday.
The local currency traded mixed against Asean currencies.
It improved against the Singapore dollar to 3.3149/3.3190, from 3.3178/3.3216 at yesterday’s close, and remained almost flat against the Indonesian rupiah at 279.4/279.9, compared to 279.6/280 previously.
However, the ringgit traded lower against the Philippine peso, at 7.51/7.53, from 7.49/7.51, and weakened against the Thai baht to 12.8710/12.8925, compared with 12.8290/12.8492 yesterday. - FMT
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