
The Asian currency, which is already weakening as the US dollar recovers, faces fresh tariff threats after President Donald Trump recently warned he may impose levies on pharmaceuticals and semiconductors, two of Singapore’s key exports.
Economists at firms such as Barclays Plc and Asia Decoded Pte. expect the Asian nation’s central bank to move to a more accommodative policy setting this month to support the economy.
“The tariff uncertainty, with higher tariffs on pharmaceuticals likely Aug 1, could add to growth headwinds for Singapore in the second half,” said Moh Siong Sim, a currency strategist at Bank of Singapore.
The local dollar may weaken toward S$1.30 to the greenback in the near term, especially if rising levies stoke US inflation and delay Federal Reserve (Fed) interest-rate cuts, he said.
The currency was at S$1.2846 at 8:10am today.
Those concerns are echoed by Priyanka Kishore, principal economist at Asia Decoded.
“Singapore is not only at a disadvantage from the prospect of sectoral tariffs on pharmaceuticals and semiconductors, but may also see an increase in the base rate of 10% on Aug 1,” she said.
Some strategists believe the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) will ease policy when it meets later this month, given inflation appears subdued.
Economists predict data due on July 23 will show core inflation rose by just 0.7% in June.
“The MAS will flatten the slope of its Singapore dollar nominal effective exchange rate, or S$NEER, policy band by 50 basis points to zero in July, rather than waiting,” Barclays Bank Plc economists wrote in a note last week.
“Unlike many of its global peers, Singapore’s central bank manages inflation by adjusting the S$NEER policy band rather than altering interest rates.
“With the S$NEER trading near the top end of the band, any flattening of the slope will cap the currency’s relative strength to its major trading partners,” economists said.
Easing Path
“With the MAS likely to stay on an easing path and flatten the slope of the S$NEER this month, our bias is for further Singapore dollar weakness,” Asia Decoded’s Kishore said.
While Singapore’s central bank looks likely to ease policy, bets on Fed rate hikes have been pushed back as policymakers watch for tariff-related inflation, bolstering the US currency.
The Singapore dollar’s use as a funding vehicle for carry trades may also weigh on its outlook.
Bloomberg Intelligence said this month that three of the four emerging-market foreign exchange factor models it uses in its analysis have gone long the Indonesian rupiah versus short the Singapore dollar.
This week’s main economic events include: today’s China 1-year and 5-year loan prime rates, South Korea’s 20-day exports and imports; Tuesday’s RBA minutes, Malaysia CPI, New Zealand trade balance, and Taiwan export orders.
On Wednesday, Singapore’s CPI is due, and BOJ’s Uchida is scheduled to speak.
On Thursday, key events include South Korea’s Q2 GDP, speeches by RBA Governor Bullock and RBNZ’s Conway, and Japan’s PMIs.
On Friday, Tokyo’s CPI and Singapore’s industrial production data will be released.