South East Asia currencies are little changed in the first part of Friday trade. Indonesia has some respite with onshore markets now closed until the 8th of April for Eid Al-fitr. Spot USD/IDR ended yesterday at 16560. SEA equities have mostly struggled, but losses haven't been as large as markets like Japan and South Korea (who are more exposed to US auto tariffs).
- INR has been a modest outperformer given a mostly stronger USD tone against the majors. Spot USD/INR was last near 85.60/65, after getting as low as 85.55 in the first part of trade. Recent lows in the pair rest at 85.49. Offshore equity flows have continued, which remains a source of support for the rupee. Note the 100-day EMA is back near 85.94.
- USD/PHP has been closed to unchanged, last in the 57.40/45 region. This is comfortably off recent highs at 57.75. Earlier data showed a much lower than expected trade deficit for Feb, at -$3.15bn (the prior read was -$5.12bn). This reflected much lower import growth, with exports near expectations and still positive. A sustain improvement in the trade deficit position will provide a tailwind to PHP.
- USD/THB is also little changed, the pair last close to 33.94. Feb IP growth in Thailand was negative at -3.91%y/y, which is lows back to early 2024.
- USD/MYR has drifted up a touch to 4.4340.