Rate-hike bets are escalating across Asia's emerging markets

Published Wed, Nov 3, 2021 · 09:50 PM

DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.

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TRADERS have had a mixed view for most of this year about when emerging-Asia central banks will begin to normalise policy. Suddenly though, they are rushing to price in rate-hike bets across the region.

The hawkish shift is most evident in South Korea and India, where markets are now anticipating at least a quarter-point increase in the next three months, while they are also building in Malaysia and Thailand over a two-year horizon.

Expectations for tighter monetary policy are being driven higher around the world as surging energy costs and Covid-driven supply-chain disruptions are causing inflation to accelerate.

Nowhere is that more apparent than in the US, where Fed fund futures are now pricing in about 25 basis points of tightening by July, versus expectations early last month for a first move only in February 2023.

Hawkish bets are increasing in emerging Asia following the Fed, said Philip McNicholas, Asean foreign-exchange and rates strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence in Singapore. "This is made easier for many by the jumps in energy prices, which are beginning to lead markets to think central banks will tighten, creating impediments to recovery and supporting overall yield curve flattening."

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Here is at look at rate bets in the four emerging Asian markets mentioned above:

  • Korean swaps are factoring in around 125 basis points of rate increases over the next 12 months, up from just 69 basis points at the start of October. Bank of Korea has already raised its official bank rate once this year - in August - and Governor Lee Ju-yeol gave his strongest signal yet that another move is likely in November. Inflation has been above target for seven straight months. The progress towards tightening is hurting Korean bonds, with a Bloomberg index of the nation's sovereign debt having slumped 12 per cent this year.
  • In India, overnight index swaps are factoring in a hike of about 50 basis points over the next six months, compared with expectations in October for an increase of just 38 basis points in the same period. Surging crude prices have added to concern about quickening inflation in the oil-importing nation. The Reserve Bank of India's unexpected announcement last month that it would halt debt purchases has also been seen as a precursor to policy normalisation. The nation's bonds handed investors a loss of 1.2 per cent in October, a second monthly decline.
  • Swap markets in Malaysia are pricing in about 40 basis points of hikes in the next 12-to-24 months, up from 23 basis points at the start of October. While domestic inflation has been relatively muted so far, economists expect price pressures to intensify as the economy reopens and the impact of higher oil prices becomes apparent. However, the nation's central bank maintained its policy rate at a record low on Wednesday (Nov 3) and projected headline inflation to remain moderate next year.
  • Thai swaps indicate almost 40 basis points of rate hikes are expected in the next 12-to-24 months, up from around 15 basis points at the start of October. The annual inflation rate climbed to 1.68 per cent in September from minus 0.02 per cent the previous month, driven by the spike in energy costs. Further price pressures may come from the release of pent-up demand following the recent easing of strict mobility curbs. BLOOMBERG

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