In Malaysia, meanwhile, the central bank on Thursday is expected to leave key rates unchanged at 3.00% and keep them there for the rest of the year, putting it in line with regional peers in India, South Korea, Indonesia and New Zealand who have already ended their tightening cycles.
Headline inflation eased to a one-year low of 2.8% in May, but core inflation moderated only a bit to 3.5%, suggesting Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) will hold its key rate higher for longer.
The central bank delivered a surprise hike in May. Last week, it said it would intervene in the foreign exchange market to stabilize the ringgit to counter what it said were “excessive” recent losses.
The ringgit was one of Asia’s worst-performing currencies in the first half of the year, losing almost 6% of its value against the dollar.
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