Central banks across Asia are increasingly using derivatives to protect their currencies against a strong US dollar, raising questions over how long they can do so and whether they are just storing up trouble for the future.
The Reserve Bank of India’s net US dollar short forward position – the amount of dollars that will be sold at a future date for a pre-set price – hit an all-time high of US$68 billion in December. Meanwhile Bank Indonesia’s net short book reached US$19.6 billion, its highest since at least 2015, show the latest official data.
The swelling forward books point to a shift in strategy among central banks intervening to defend their currencies. But the use of derivatives in addition to spot trades to push back against the US dollar is raising concerns about the risk that selling pressure is being deferred rather than removed.
“It’s basically pushing out currency depreciation to a later date and in the meantime, keeping headline reserves high as a way of displaying confidence,” said Dhiraj Nim, a currency strategist at Australia and New Zealand Banking Group.“I’m a bit worried about that scenario.”
BI and the RBI didn’t immediately respond to Bloomberg’s request for comment. Both institutions have previously confirmed use of derivatives.
The Indian rupee and the Indonesian rupiah have been two of Asia’s worst performing currencies over the past 12 months, both losing more than 4 per cent of their value against the US dollar.
The election of US President Donald Trump has ramped up pressure on emerging-market central banks. Trump’s threats of tariffs have fuelled waves of currency depreciation against the US dollar, while his willingness to label other countries as currency manipulators has raised the political scrutiny of intervention.
“It’s clearly a very sensitive issue, particularly in the environment we are now in, when there’s a lot of scrutiny by the US with regards to fair trade and currency manipulation,” said Claudio Piron, co-head of currency and rates strategy at Bank of America. “I don’t think there’s a real desire to be in the market excessively intervening.”
In the wake of Trump’s inauguration on Jan 20, a fact sheet circulated detailing his plans, including a call for federal agencies to address currency manipulation by other countries. The designation comes with no immediate penalties but it can rattle financial markets. Trump labelled China a currency manipulator during his first term, while India has previously been on the US watchlist.
Forwards have a number of key advantages for central banks, including potentially lower costs and the fact that they don’t drain the money supply. But they also allow central banks to mask their interventions. The derivatives don’t eat into official reserves, something that may minimise the risk of attracting Trump’s ire. The strategy also allows central banks to keep traders guessing.
Malaysia has also adopted the strategy of using currency forwards. Its net short forward book was around US$27.5 billion by November, after swelling about US$4 billion last year. The Philippines reduced its net long forward to just US$874 million, the IMF data show.
On Feb 11, the Reserve Bank of India was suspected of a heavy intervention to push up the value of the rupee. The currency rose nearly 1 per cent, its biggest gain since November 2022, triggering stop-losses among rupee bears. The central bank intervened across spot and forward markets, traders said.
US dollar decline
In theory, a recent decline in the US dollar offers central banks a reprieve. Trump has cancelled or delayed tariffs on Canada, Colombia and Mexico, fuelling doubts that he will deliver on his biggest threats. A broad gauge of the US dollar has lost more than 1.8 per cent so far this year.
There are also signs that policymakers are also changing tack, with new RBI Governor Sanjay Malhotra appearing to adopt a more flexible approach to managing the exchange rate. The RBI has dialled down its bets in the non-deliverable forwards market, according to strategists, and is instead conducting onshore operations in a bid to boost domestic liquidity.
But the advantages of forwards mean the strategy is likely to remain popular among central banks.
“I see very few cons” to using the forward market, said Aaron Hurd, a senior portfolio manager in the currency group at State Street Global Advisors. Central banks need to be careful not build up a forward book that is too large, but right now that isn’t a big worry, he said.
Credits: businesstime.com.sg