Business

Ringgit falls 290 basis points against greenback at opening

This, after first-ever hung Parliament outcome from GE15 shakes investor confidence

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 21 Nov 2022 9:42AM

Ringgit falls 290 basis points against greenback at opening
At 9am, the local note slid 290 basis points to 4.5780/5880 against the US dollar from Thursday’s close of 4.5490/5565. – AFP pic, November 21, 2022

KUALA LUMPUR – The ringgit slipped further against the US dollar this morning, extending last week’s downtrend, as the first-ever hung Parliament outcome in Malaysia from the 15th general election held last Saturday shook investor confidence, an analyst said.

At 9am, the local note slid 290 basis points (bps) to 4.5780/5880 against the US dollar from Thursday’s close of 4.5490/5565. 

The market was closed last Friday to enable voters to cast vote in GE15.

KUALA LUMPUR – The ringgit slipped further against the US dollar this morning, extending last week’s downtrend, as the first-ever hung Parliament outcome in Malaysia from the 15th general election (GE15) held last Saturday shook investor confidence, an analyst said.

At 9am, the local note slid 290 basis points to 4.5780/5880 against the US dollar from Thursday’s close of 4.5490/5565.

The market was closed last Friday to enable voters to cast a vote in GE15.

However, SPI Asset Management managing director Stephen Innes reckons that the market would take the general election results in stride given that the hung government was expected.

“So, expect more political horse-trading and compromise in such a setting, which could provide checks and balances, with the focus on the formation of the next government.

“However, from the market’s perspective, the GE15 results may fail to ease concerns over the recent phase of political instability, which had been hanging as a dark cloud over Malaysian capital markets,” he said.

GE15, the most intense general election the country had ever faced, has ended in a hung Parliament with no party securing a clear majority to form a new federal government.

Innes noted that investors have been shrugging off the hawkish US Federal Reserve interest rate hike decisions and peering down the China reopening-looking lens, which should be favourable for local capital markets.

“Also, any weakness in the US Dollar Index should encourage exporters to pare down their accumulated US dollar holdings and be a driver of the ringgit’s strength,” he added. 

Ambank Research said that the focus of the week would be on the US Federal Open Market Committee minutes, which should provide a clearer picture of the interest rates outlook.

“Therefore, we expect the ringgit to trade between our support level of 4.550 and 4.560 while resistance is pinned at 4.600 and 4.610,” it said. 

Meanwhile, the ringgit traded lower against a basket of major currencies.

It fell versus the Singapore dollar to 3.3280/3358 from 3.3091/3150 at Thursday’s close, depreciated against the euro to 4.7222/7325 from 4.7146/7224, eased vis-a-vis the Japanese yen to 3.2628/2701 from 3.2581/2637 and down versus the British pound to 5.4323/4441 from 5.4069/4159 previously. – Bernama, November 21, 2022

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