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Taiwan Dollar's Record Rally is a Trade-War Tremor

  • Taiwan dollar gains 8% vs USD in two days
  • Central bank says US did not ask for stronger TWD
  • Move suggests unwinding of financial imbalances - strategist

SINGAPORE/TAIPEI, May 5 (Reuters) - An unprecedented two-day surge in Taiwan's currency is the latest leg of a scramble out of the U.S. dollar and signal of disquiet in markets as U.S. President Donald Trump's trade war rattles confidence and disrupts trade relationships.

Taiwan occupies one of the most valuable and vulnerable points in the global economy, as the dominant manufacturer of high-end computer chips and supplier to both the U.S. and China.

Its currency, usually contained by a central bank with a mandate for stability, has leapt 8% in two days, with traders complaining of no buyers for U.S. dollars that insurers, exporters and investors suddenly wanted to sell.

The precise trigger for the sudden rise was not clear.

Yet the move coincided with the end of U.S.-Taiwan trade talks in Washington, which fuelled speculation of an agreement to weaken the greenback in return for trade concessions.

Such a deal has been repeatedly denied by the central bank, but not entirely believed by a market which sees the Taiwan dollar's jump having its tacit approval, as well as likely to be welcomed by the United States.

The scale of the rally suggests a big unwinding is under way and shines a light on one economy among many where years of big trade surpluses have built up large long dollar positions at exporters and insurers that are now under question and on edge.

"The Taiwan dollar is appreciating at a faster pace than I've ever seen," said one senior Taiwanese financial industry executive, on condition of anonymity as they were not authorised to speak to the media.

"Hot money is coming into Taiwan, and the central bank is allowing it. Many are saying that's due to pressure from the U.S. I would say that must be the case."

Taiwan's central bank said on Monday the U.S. did not ask for a stronger Taiwan dollar and said the currency had been volatile lately because of foreign fund inflows and companies' expectations of a stronger Taiwan dollar.

Taiwan President Lai Ching-te on Monday also weighed in calling on people not to spread fake stories about foreign exchange rate talks with the United States.

Taiwan's office of trade negotiations said on Monday that the talks last week did not include the central bank or touch on the exchange rate. The currency notched its strongest close in more than two years on Monday, closing at 30.145 to the dollar .

HOW IT HAPPENED

The Taiwan dollar has been moving higher since early April, when Trump announced the heaviest of his tariffs and put a - since suspended - 32% import tax on Taiwan.

The trend seemed to start with a bump from the easing of U.S.-China tensions, but started to feed on itself as unique features of Taiwan's capital markets drove desperate buying.

As exporters saw the value of their U.S. dollar receipts dropping and insurers the value of their vast offshore holdings fall in Taiwan dollar terms, exporters rushed to convert and insurers scrambled simultaneously to hedge their currency exposure.

"The (U.S. dollar) selling interest originates onshore," said Tareck Horchani, head of prime brokerage dealing at Maybank Securities in Singapore.

That, in turn, he said, pushed foreigners with leveraged positions in the cheap-to-borrow Taiwan dollar to quit and the forced buying of Taiwan dollars turbocharged the moves.

To be sure, on both Friday and Monday the currency stabilised after morning surges and the central bank reiterated on Monday that it would do its best to maintain stability.

Still, the speed and size of the jump - in statistical parlance a 19-standard-deviation event - point to longer-term forces afoot.

"It ... underscores how a pileup of less-noticed financial imbalances can elicit sharp corrections when the underlying political canvas undergoes a seismic change," said Aninda Mitra, head of Asia macro strategy at BNY Investment Institute.

And those speculating on a broader shakeout as the Trump administration seeks to re-shape its trade relations see it as a harbinger of the next leg of dollar weakness in Asia.

"While the jury on whether (the Trump administration) can move manufacturing onshore is out, and we are unlikely to know for sure, a weak dollar is certainly an integral part of their strategy," said Sunil Kalra, portfolio manager at LC Beacon Global Fund.

"So the stars are aligned, and while so far most dollar weakness has been seen in the precious metals and G10 space, is it finally time for this to spread into emerging markets, especially Asian EM, which has lagged?"

Reporting by Ankur Banerjee, Tom Westbrook, Rae Wee and Vidya Ranganathan in Singapore, Ben Blanchard, Faith Hung, Liang-sa Loh and Jeanny Kao in Taipei Writing by Tom Westbrook; Editing by Kate Mayberry

Source: Reuters


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