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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/emirresea/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Published by Astro Awani<\/a>, image by Astro Awani<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n Since the idea of #undibanjir<\/strong> was first advanced in mid-September 2022, the ringgit Malaysia has accelerated heading south. The pair appears to have no fundamental strength left unless a miracle can happen and Malaysia\u2019s \u201cpolicymakers\u201d can finally put forward a credible action plan for resuscitating the nation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The USD\/MYR price pattern articulately states where reality stands versus the pure narrative management talks about \u201cfairly strong reserves\u201d, \u201ceconomy on the right footing\u201d with \u201cstronger economic or trade growth\u201d (on extremely low base though), \u201cweak ringgit benefitting our exporters\u201d and finally, yet another unsustainable feudal budget.<\/p>\n\n\n\n EMIR Research has warned as early as end-2021 that the ringgit appears to be poised for serious depreciation after a year of ranging, based on technical analysis and fundamentals (refer to \u201cRinggit open for downward speculative pressure?<\/em>\u201d from December 20, 2021).<\/p>\n\n\n\n In this article, EMIR Research drew attention to the critical factors placing currency in a weak position, such as depleting international reserves, continuously sliding exchange rate, especially in combination with the belief that this general trend will continue (based on the country’s fundamentals), expanding domestic credit (public and private), and domestic inflation. These factors could have been observed in Malaysia for some time and were ignored only by policymakers but not the investors, entrepreneurs, local human capital etc.<\/p>\n\n\n\n And EMIR Research particularly stressed that even more than all the above factors, it is the political instability, weak national governance, inconsistency and uncertainty of national policies and lack of strategic direction for the country that always hurts domestic currency the most<\/strong>, as considerable empirical evidence in the academic literature suggests.<\/p>\n\n\n\n EMIR Research then reiterated, once again, in a more recent article, \u201cRM Meltdown \u2014 Preparing for the Worst<\/em>\u201d, from September 21, 2022, the following idea. Should there be more talks about holding the elections (at that time, the idea was just voiced out) some more during the expected particularly adverse flood season, technically, nothing is stopping the ringgit from reaching RM5 per 1 US dollar, probably, finding an intermediate resistance around the RM4.8 per 1 US dollar level (Figure 2) unless there is a fundamental<\/strong> reversal in the form of credible policymaking and lessened politicking.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Now, after almost one month, we are less than 10 cents away from RM4.8 per 1 US dollar level (round number close to all-time historical low \u2014 huge psychological level), and #undibanjir<\/strong> is, unfortunately, certain.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Yes, the hawkish US dollar hurts almost all currencies.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Yes, there are currencies of even more robust, developed economies affected worse than the ringgit due to their geo-political involvement or being dovish outliers on rate hikes. But even that larger depreciation would not hurt those better-equipped nations as bad as a relatively smaller depreciation can hurt our country, given its structural economic weaknesses, shrinking industry and massive dependence on food imports.<\/p>\n\n\n\n However, to a large extent, the information about all the Fed rate hikes (completed and coming) has already been built into the prices a long time ago and now it is more of the fundamentals for every nation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n In Figure 2, notice how the ringgit weakened only moderately, even after two consecutive 75 basis points rate hikes by the Fed and even with sliding crude oil prices at the backdrop. However, also notice how the ringgit started to descend, like on steroids, when another Fed hike coincided with the first talks about #undibanjir<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n In Figure 2, notice that the first serious move for the ringgit happened during the Covid-related lockdowns in China, coinciding with the devaluation of the Yuan, climate-related damage to agro produce in various parts of the world, escalating fuel and fertiliser prices resulting in full-fledged food security crisis in many countries, including Malaysia. During that period, within the Southeast Asian region ringgit versus US Dollar performed better only in comparison with Myanmar and Laos (Figure 3.A), indirectly pointing to the fact, among other things, that Malaysia\u2019s inflation rate, at that time, was worse than in most of the region.<\/p>\n\n\n\n We cannot continue to brush off the problem of significant ringgit depreciation with the book-style statements that it will boost our trade and growth \u2014 a very uncertain statement based on data and science.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<\/figure>\n\n\n\n
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