Billions of Dollars, Bold Action: EMs Battle a Surging Greenback

From Brazil to South Korea, emerging-market central banks are forming a line of defense as a rising dollar pushes their currencies to multi-year lows.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas is watching the peso’s drop closely and has stepped up intervention in the currency market, Governor Eli Remolona said Friday. Brazil’s central bank has spent almost $14 billion in the past week to support the real while Bank Indonesia vowed to guard the rupiah “boldly” to build market confidence.

Authorities in developing economies are on the defensive as the greenback’s strength wreaks havoc across global markets, with South Korea’s won falling to the lowest in over 15 years while India’s rupee and the real crashed to all-time lows. A rapid decline in currencies risks worsening the impact of imported inflation for emerging markets, and may also increase the cost of servicing debt on foreign liabilities.

“It is hard to go against a strong USD trend,” said Christopher Wong, a currency strategist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. in Singapore. “Intervention in such an environment can only slow the pace of currency depreciation. Despite that, central banks may still have to use a mix of verbal and actual intervention tools.”

EM FX