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Monday, March 18, 2024

Malaysian bonds beat emerging Asia peers as ringgit bounces back

 

The currency strengthened by almost 0.8% in March after Bank Negara Malaysia said it was encouraging state-linked firms to repatriate and convert their overseas earnings.

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia’s ringgit has been one of emerging Asia’s best performers this month, giving investors another reason to buy the nation’s bonds.

The currency strengthened by almost 0.8% in March after Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) said it was encouraging state-linked firms to repatriate and convert their overseas earnings. Among other bond positives are improving exports and a relatively stable inflation rate.

“Malaysia’s government bonds are a key element of our investment strategy and we currently maintain a moderately overweight position,” said Peerampa Janjumratsang, a fund manager for Asia fixed income at M&G Investments in Singapore.

She added that it was based on the “potential for the ringgit’s outperformance, supported by the country’s strong consumption and stable inflation profile.”

Malaysia’s local-currency sovereign bonds have returned 1.1% to dollar-based investors this month, compared with a gain of just 0.2% for emerging Asian debt as a whole, according to indexes compiled by Bloomberg.

Part of their recent outperformance can be put down to the ringgit, which bounced back from a 26-year low set last month as the government and BNM stepped up efforts to support it.

The currency is undervalued and should be stronger given the nation’s positive economic outlook, BNM governor Abdul Rasheed Ghaffour said in late February.

The ringgit’s recent gain “motivates exporters and local investors to favour ringgit deposits and investments over the US dollar, countering fears of further ringgit depreciation,” M&G’s Janjumratsang said.

Exports jump

Malaysian exports jumped by 8.7% in January from a year earlier, ending 10 straight months of annual declines, the government reported on Feb 20.

Economists predict another year-on-year increase when February’s data are released today, based on a Bloomberg survey.

Overseas investors bought a net US$119 million of Malaysia’s conventional government bonds in February, according to data from BNM. In comparison, Thailand and Indonesia both saw net outflows.

“We continue to recommend staying tactically FX-unhedged in Malaysian bond positions as the ringgit tends to outperform regional currencies when the regulator steps up support following an extended period of weakness,” said Winson Phoon, head of fixed-income research at Maybank Securities Pte in Singapore.

The ringgit closed Friday at 4.7072 per dollar, having strengthened from the level of 4.75 on March 4 when Phoon made his trade call. - FMT

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