EM Currencies Are at Central Banks’ Mercy as Fiscal Policy Lags

EM Currencies Are at Central Banks’ Mercy as Fiscal Policy Lags

(Bloomberg) — Emerging-market central banks are becoming the first line of defense to shield local currencies pummeled by speculative attacks and fiscal shortfalls.

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The latest bout of intervention from Latin American central banks in the currency market shows their tug of war with hot money is likely to persist until governments rein in spending. Over in Asia, the People’s Bank of China is enlisting more tools to defend the yuan as disappointing fiscal stimulus so far in the face of anemic growth and US tariff threats weaken the currency.

“Central bank currency intervention is not a tool that can adequately or sustainably defend regional currencies,” said Brendan McKenna, an emerging-markets economist and foreign-exchange strategist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in New York. Shifting back toward fiscal responsibility would be the most effective way to stabilize a currency, he added.

The dollar’s surge due to a resilient US economy and expectations of fewer interest-rate cuts from the Federal Reserve have put central banks around the world on guard to defend their currencies and avert capital outflows. However, emerging market governments are constrained from deploying more fiscal firepower to bolster growth due to their elevated debt levels following the Covid pandemic.

The PBOC is keeping a tight grip on the yuan with its daily reference rate, around which the yuan can trade in a 2% range versus the dollar. It’s also planning to sell bills in Hong Kong to tighten liquidity offshore and drive up demand for the currency. But that’s hardly taming bearish bets as the onshore yuan lingers near the weak end of its allowed trading range.

Bank Indonesia is planning to help the government refinance maturing pandemic-era debt. Brazil’s central bank led a historic intervention to defend the real which fell to a record low versus the dollar in December due to a ballooning budget deficit, while the Colombian monetary authority surprised markets by slowing its easing campaign due to uncertainty over government finances.

But these moves may only slow the inevitable impact on their currencies, as investors remain reluctant to buy on dips unless there’s a noticeable improvement in fundamentals, which would need to come mainly from the fiscal side.

PBOC Pushback

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