Asian Central Banks Step Up Currency Defense Amid Strong Dollar and Rate Hike Expectations

According to Jin10, on June 4, Asian authorities are strengthening currency defense measures as high energy costs and expectations of U.S. Federal Reserve rate hikes pressure regional currencies. South Korea pledged Thursday to curb excessive volatility after the won dropped to levels near its lowest since 2009. Indonesia's central bank is intensifying intervention to stabilize the rupiah, which has fallen to record lows. Japan's central bank is preparing to consider a 25 basis point rate hike this month, according to informed sources. India plans to attract capital inflows through tax reductions and removing caps on certain bond holdings as the rupee hovers near historic lows.

Wee Khoon Chong, senior market strategist for Bank of New York Mellon's Asia-Pacific division, noted that difficult and rapidly changing market conditions keep regional central banks on high alert, with a strong dollar, elevated oil prices, and capital outflows weighing on Asian currencies.

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