Posts Tagged ‘currency’

Strong baht to continue

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

Businesses must steel themselves for greater exchange rate volatility, says Bank of Thailand governor Tarisa Watanagase.

Local businesses need to prepare for further appreciation of the baht and volatility in exchange rates, she said.

But the central bank will ease regulations to facilitate capital outflows and support the development of instruments to help companies hedge currency risks.

Dr Tarisa, speaking at a briefing on central bank policy for 2010, said regulations would be eased to allow the private sector to increase investment in international financial markets.

Facilitating overseas investment and capital outflows would help reduce pressure on the baht to rise from capital inflows and trade surpluses.

The baht, currently trading near 33 to the US dollar, has gained nearly 1% against the greenback this year and more than 5% since January 2009.

Most analysts expect the US dollar to weaken in the near term due to weaknesses in the US economy.

Dr Tarisa said at the same time Asian economies, including Thailand, would eventually be forced to raise interest rates to help stem inflationary pressures as economic growth continued.

But the central bank would not turn to capital controls as in 2006, she said, adding that regulators today monitored capital flows on a daily basis compared with every week several years ago.

Bangkok Post Breaking News 28/01/2010

Thai GM signs B13.5bn loan deal

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

General Motors Thailand signed 13.5 billion baht worth of seven-year loans Friday with three local banks to help finance three new plants in Rayong.

Bangkok Bank and Siam Commercial Bank will provide loans of 6 billion baht each to the US auto giant, with another 1.5 billion arranged by Tisco Bank.

General Motors Thailand (GMTH) will use the funds to finance three projects: a plant for its next-generation pickup trucks, a plant to assemble pickup-derived sports utility vehicles (SUV) and a new diesel engine manufacturing plant.

The investment projects will run from 2011 to 2012, with the three facilities located at the company’s 440-rai complex in Rayong.

US parent General Motors will provide $118 million in equity funding to help finance the projects, which have a total cost of 15 billion baht.

Steve Carlisle, the president of GMTH/ASEAN and Chevrolet Sales Thailand, said the proceeds would facilitate further growth of the GM and Chevrolet brands in Thailand and Asean.

The company aims to raise its total market share in car sales in Thailand to 3-4% by the end of 2010 from 2.8-2.9% last year.

Total car sales in 2009 were 530,000 units.

GM hoped to arrange the loans since last year, but local banks balked at offering new financing due to the global financial crisis. GM filed for bankruptcy protection last June after car sales plummeted in the US due to the crisis.

FTI: Politics ‘impeding business development’

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

The private sector has indicated that political factors are a major drawback for the economy at present, while suggesting the government solve the problem of in order to improve the country’s competitiveness, Thai News Agency (TNA) reports.

Thanit Sorat, vice-chairman of the Federation of Thai Industries (FTI), says that the World Economic Forum’s ranking of Thailand’s competitiveness at 36, down from 34 last year, “reflects a negative future” for the economy.

He said Thailand was facing obstacles in business due to obsolete laws and had been noted by foreign investors for its corruption problems. The government needs to quickly establish solutions to the problem since it was severely “obstructing national development”, he said.

Thanit said the decrease in competitiveness had resulted in a decline in private investment. He said government support under its Strong Thailand scheme was only aimed at injecting funds into the economic system, but was not efficient at stimulating private investment.

Asia-Pacific trade deal faces skeptical Americans

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Its share of trade dwindling in the Asia Pacific, the United States is scrambling to drum up support from a skeptical public for a regional trade deal that can boost exports and create jobs.

President Barack Obama wants the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) linking the United States with an initial group of seven nations — Australia, Brunei, Chile, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam — to be the engine for a “high-standard, broad-based” regional trade agreement, officials said.

But pushing trade deals in the powerful Congress and among Americans at large is no easy task.

Three free trade pacts that were signed with South Korea, Panama and Colombia under Obama’s predecessor George W. Bush remain in limbo as lawmakers from Obama’s Democratic party attempt to reopen talks for more concessions.

More than one third of Americans feel trade agreements are bad for America, and more than 40 percent believe such pacts have hurt their personal financial situation, according to polls cited by the office of the US Trade Representative (USTR).

Surveys also show that only 13 percent of Americans think trade agreements create jobs, while over half think these pacts lead to job losses.

But with Obama setting a bold goal last week to double US exports over the next five years, an increase that will support two million new jobs in America, his administration is giving a rare push to the TPP deal.

Officials are “beginning an unprecedented 50-state domestic outreach strategy” and holding consultations to “remedy the deep skepticism on trade and to rebuild solid bipartisan support for trade,” said Demetrios Marantis, Obama’s deputy trade representative.

Marantis said negotiations for a TPP agreement with rapidly growing Asia-Pacific economies could be “complex and challenging but this watershed moment in trade policy demands our focus and ambition.

“If we are to set an enduring anchor to the world’s future drivers of economic growth, we must raise the stakes and push the envelope.”

The first round of negotiations for the TPP deal is expected to be in March and experts say more countries could eventually come aboard, including possibly Canada, Japan, Mexico and South Korea, and Malaysia or Indonesia.

“It is the first major proactive initiative that the Obama administration has put forward in the trade front,” Jeff Schott, a senior trade expert at the Washington-based Peterson Institute for International Economics, told AFP.

Although the current partners in the deal are not among the fastest growing economies or do not have sufficiently large economies, the US can still have a long term benefit, Schott and institute head Fred Bergsten said in a report to Obama’s top trade official Ron Kirk last week.

“The US payoff thus depends on extending the TPP to other major economies of the Asia-Pacific region, starting with Canada — and probably Mexico — in the very near future and hopefully adding Japan and South Korea within the next year or two,” they said.

The Asia-Pacific region is a huge market for the United States.

Even given the deteriorating global economy, US goods exports to the region totaled 747 billion dollars in 2008.

But “America faces the daunting prospect of getting locked out of the Asia-Pacific,” Marantis warned, pointing to China’s rapid trade inroads in the region.

Just a month ago, China and the 10 ASEAN member states ushered in the world’s third-largest free-trade area.

In addition, there are already 175 preferential trade agreements in force involving Asia-Pacific countries with an additional 20 agreements awaiting implementation and more than 50 others under negotiation.

Against the backdrop, the US share of trade with the Asia-Pacific has fallen, officials said.

“Our rough estimates suggest that an East Asia Free Trade Area could cost the United States at least 25 billion dollars of annual exports immediately, which translates into about 200,000 high-paying jobs,” Schott said.

“Over time, the discriminatory impact would become much greater as US-based international companies were forced to source more and more of their sales into the rapidly growing Asian markets from their subsidiaries in Asia.”

Govt Optimistic on 2010 GDP Growth

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

The finance minister is confident that the House will not be dissolved and there will be no coup. He is also optimistic that Thailand’s GDP will grow by as much as 4 percent this year.

Even though the domestic political climate is a worrying factor to Thailand’s economic growth, Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij urged all investors to disassociate facts from rumors and confirmed strong political stability.

He said rumors of a coup and House dissolution should be disregarded since coups are condemned internationally.

The finance minister reiterated that the government is progressively working to boost the economy by clearing debts.

The minister is also confident that Thailand’s 2010 GDP can expand by 3.5 to 4 percent.

Foreign investors apparently have high hope for investment in Thailand as Finance Ministry representatives today signed an agreement with General Motors, the Bangkok Bank, the Siam Commercial Bank and Tesco bank to secure General Motors a 17 billion-baht loan to help improve Thailand’s automobile industry.

Thai Asean Network, 29 January 2010

Baht should stand at B34 to US dollar

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

The Bank of Thailand should make sure that the Thai baht value’s stand at between 33 to 34 baht per US dollar, Manoon Siriwan, an energy expert, said on Saturday.

“If the Thai currency is weaker than that levels, it could affect domestic retail prices of fuel”, Mr Manoon said, adding that every one baht in value change of the baht would affect the increase or the decrease in local pump prices by 0.60 baht a litre.

The energy expert expected oil price on the world market to stand at about US$70 per barrel next week.

Kasikornthai Research Centre projected the Thai Baht value would stand at about 32.90 to 33.20 baht per US dollar next week.

Bangkok Post, 30/01/2010

World Bank: 3.5% growth in Thailand 2010

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

The Thai economy is expected to expand 3.5 per cent in 2010, a substantial improvement from a 2.7 per contraction this year, in line with the recovering global economy, Kirida Phaophichit, an economist at the World Bank’s Bangkok office, said on Wednesday.

Ms Kirada said the prime risk factor that could derail recovery was an increase in global oil prices. She projected the average oil price would increase from US$65 per barrel this year to $75 next year.

Another possible factor was the devaluation of currencies by countries wanting to strengthen export competitiveness, which could hurt Thai exports.

Domestic risk factors included political uncertainty, the slow spending of government investment budgets and the investment impasse in Rayong’s Map Ta Phut industrial estate, which affects the confidence of investors.

Pongnakorn Photchanaporn, director of the Economic Budget Division at the Ministry of Finance’s Fiscal policy Office, projected the economy would grow 3.3 per cent next year.

Mr Pongnakorn said the 2010 economy would be boosted by the government’s Thai Khem Kaeng (Strong Thailand) stimulus scheme.

He agreed oil prices were a risk factor, as the price was likely to rise next year.

He predicted the average oil price in 2010 would be between $80 and $90 per barrel.

Bangkok Post breaking news 2/12/2009