Selangor Journal
An employee counts US dollar bills at a money exchange in central Cairo, Egypt, March 20, 2019. — Picture by REUTERS

Ringgit falls ahead of second quarter GDP data, on hawkish bias signal from Fed

KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 17 — The ringgit retreated from yesterday’s gains to end lower against the greenback on Thursday as the minutes from the United States’ Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) pointed to US interest rates staying higher for longer, an economist said.

An expected slowdown in Malaysia’s second-quarter economic growth and China’s recovery woes further dampened sentiment.

At 6pm, the local note fell to 4.6535/6550 against the US dollar from 4.6265/6320 at Wednesday’s close.

Bank Muamalat Malaysia Bhd chief economist Mohd Afzanizam Abdul Rashid told Bernama that markets remained jittery over the outlook of US monetary policy given the mixed signals from FOMC officials.

“The risk-off mode emanating from China’s (struggling) economy also suggests that the demand for US dollars will remain intact as investors would want to seek shelter against global uncertainties,” he said.

Mohd Afzanizam said the market will watch out for Malaysia’s second quarter (2Q) gross domestic product (GDP) data due tomorrow, which is expected to slow from 5.6 per cent to 3.3 per cent based on consensus estimates.

The ringgit was traded lower against a basket of major currencies.

It weakened versus the Japanese yen to 3.1832/1846 from 3.1782/1822 on Wednesday, dropped versus the euro to 5.0602/0618 from 5.0549/0609, and inched down vis-à-vis the British pound to 5.9211/9230 from 5.9020/9090 yesterday’s closing.

Similarly, the local unit was traded lower against other Asean currencies.

The ringgit eased vis-à-vis the Singapore dollar to 3.4212/4228 from 3.4086/4132 on Wednesday and went down against the Thai baht to 13.1306/1423 from 13.0777/0995 previously.

It depreciated against the Philippine peso to 8.19/8.20 from 8.18/8.20 yesterday and declined versus the Indonesian rupiah to 304.4/304.7 from 302.7/303.2 previously.

— Bernama

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