Asian currencies are enjoying the ride too – Indonesia’s rupiah which hit an eight-month high on Thursday, and Singapore’s dollar rose to a two-month peak.
The ‘Sing dollar’ is liable to move further on Friday, with traders braced for first quarter GDP growth data and the central bank’s semi-annual monetary policy decision.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) is expected to tighten monetary policy for the sixth time in a row, amid persistent price pressures in the Asian financial hub due to global supply chain disruptions.
A slim majority of analysts polled by Reuters expect MAS to tighten, although this could be the last time if the growth picture is any guide – the first estimate of Q1 GDP is expected to show growth slowing sharply on an annual basis and shrinking from the previous quarter.
Lastly, Indian wholesale price inflation is expected to virtually halve in March to a 1.87% annual rate from 3.85%. It was 16% less than a year ago.
|