The Philippine peso is experiencing its strongest annual opening since 2012, driven by sustained foreign capital inflows into the stock market and a generally weaker US dollar. Since the start of the year, the peso has appreciated by nearly 2%, marking the largest gain for the same period since early 2012, with its rebound momentum strengthening steadily after hitting a record low in January. Following eight consecutive years of net capital outflows, foreign funds have been flowing into the Philippine local stock market for two straight months. Against a backdrop of growing pessimism towards the US dollar, Asian currencies have generally strengthened this year. In the Philippines' case, the stock market rally is attracting continuous foreign capital back, with the benchmark stock index approaching bull market territory. However, the peso's strong performance comes with warning signs. Some analysts believe that as expectations for interest rate cuts within the year intensify, the peso's gains may fade towards year-end. BMI, a unit of Fitch Solutions, forecasts that by the end of 2026, the peso will depreciate by over 3% from last Friday's level to 59.50 per US dollar. Brandon Ong, a Country Risk Analyst at BMI in Singapore, stated, "The Philippine peso's recent strength is more a result of US dollar weakness rather than a sudden improvement in domestic fundamentals." BMI expects the Philippine central bank to cut interest rates by another 25 basis points to 4% by the end of 2026, which would narrow the interest rate differential with the US and reduce the peso's attractiveness. Furthermore, a major corruption scandal led to the country's economic growth rate last quarter hitting its lowest level in 14 years, excluding the pandemic period. Philippine Central Bank Governor Eli Remolona said this month that the central bank will fully support the economy without triggering inflation.
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