Money
Ringgit traded lower for second consecutive day
Malay Mail

KUALA LUMPUR, April 14 — The ringgit ended lower against the US dollar amid an underwhelming response to the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries + (Opec+) production cut deal and the not-so-rosy China trade balance for March.

At 6pm, the ringgit was quoted at 4.3300/3400 against the US dollar from 4.3200/3280 recorded at yesterday’s close.

AxiCorp global chief market strategist Stephen Innes said despite the Opec+ deal, the market was still worried about the demand side amid the Covid-19 outbreak.

"This hurts local inflows. The ringgit needs higher oil prices as it is the local unit’s auto stabiliser,” he told Bernama.

In addition, Innes said the performance of Asia’s currency markets was a mixed bag after China’s trade balance narrowed, although both exports and imports were better than expected in percentage terms.

"And when factoring in the backlogged export data, it’s not that significant of a local forex driver although the data is better than expected,” he said.

China’s trade balance narrowed to US$19.9 billion in March, while exports declined 6.6 per cent in dollar terms from a year earlier and imports fell 0.9 per cent.

The country recorded a combined 17.2 per cent contraction in January and February exports, while imports fell 4.0 per cent in the two months combined.

Innes said traders would likely sit tight waiting for China to release its first-quarter gross domestic product figure this Friday as well as for the US March retail sales and industrial production data.

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

It declined vis-a-vis the Singapore dollar to 3.0558/0639 from 3.0513/0582 on Monday and was lower against the euro at 4.7388/7514 from 4.7252/7344.

The local unit also weakened against the yen to 4.0290/039 from 4.0011/0096 yesterday and depreciated against the British pound to 5.4342/4489 from 5.4026/4139 previously. — Bernama

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