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Philippine Peso Declines as Marcos Limits FX Defense Marcos' March 24, 2026 comment that the government won't use all FX reserves coincided with a peso slide to ~56.3/USD. The 6% growth target to 2028 raises policy trade-offs.

Philippine Peso Declines as Marcos Limits FX Defense: Marcos' March 24, 2026 comment that the government won't use all FX reserves coincided with a peso slide to ~56.3/USD. The 6% growth target to 2028… 👈 Read full analysis #PhilippinePeso #ForexMarket #CurrencyDecline #FXReserves #EconomicGrowth

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IMF wild child Argentina seeks waiver on FX reserves misses - and will probably get it By Eliana Raszewski BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) -Argentina, the International Monetary Fund’s long-term problem child and biggest debtor, once again needs to seek forgiveness: this time for falling short on foreign currency reserve build-up targets linked to a new $20 billion deal. The South American country is likely to get it, too, analysts and former officials said. Argentina struck its latest deal - its 23rd - with the Washington-based lender in April, needed to help roll over an earlier $44 billion deal and give the government of libertarian Javier Milei financial firepower to undo capital controls. The front-loaded deal came with economic targets attached to unlock further funds, including on inflation and rebuilding depleted central bank foreign currency reserves, that were deep in the red when Milei took office in late 2023. Milei has tempered inflation with tough austerity and guided the country out of a recession, but accumulating dollars has proven tough, leaving levels short of those demanded by the IMF. However, former government and IMF officials said that Milei had done enough to gain some leeway, with his cost-cutting having overturned years of deep fiscal deficits, winning over markets and gaining plaudits from IMF leaders. "I think they will forgive them even if they (the IMF) then ask for more later," Claudio Loser, former IMF director for the Western Hemisphere, told Reuters. That would likely come in the form of a waiver, approving the first program review despite missed targets on reserves. An IMF team arrived in Argentina on Tuesday for that review. Daniel Marx, former Argentine finance secretary from 1999 to 2001, told Reuters that the next disbursement - some $2 billion - would require the IMF to give special dispensation. "Most likely, the disbursement won’t be automatic, but it will require a waiver," he said. "It was thought that the central bank would have intervened by accumulating reserves. This hasn’t happened, at least until now." The Ministry of Economy and presidency did not respond to a request for comment. The central bank declined to comment and said talks with the IMF technical team were just starting. The IMF pointed to a statement about its team arriving in Argentina. Key to the waiver is Milei’s strong record on the fiscal surplus with his tough "deficit zero" drive. Last week the government said it would deepen cost cutting in order to hit a surplus target of 1.6% of GDP. Minister of Economy Luis Caputo said earlier this month reserves accumulation was no longer as important as before with a freer float for the peso currency and the central bank better financed. He flagged IMF backing for Milei’s reforms. "That won’t cause major problems for the Fund," he said. "I think forgiveness (the waiver) will be approved quickly and the disbursement may take a week or two."

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Liquidity: Sterilisation, Caution, Or Doubling Down? FX book chickens come home to roost in 2025-26, and the RBI’s liquidity injections may need to grow even larger to avoid a fresh policy transmission hiccup.

Read the article: basispointinsight.com/Story/Home/l...

#RBI #LiquidityManagement #ForexIntervention #CRR #OMO #BondMarkets #FXReserves #TrumpEffect

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Percent of global FX reserves in dollars ticks up, amounts fall, IMF data shows NEW YORK (Reuters) - The amount in U.S. dollars held as reserve currency globally slipped in the last quarter of 2024 while the percentage of actual dollars held as reserve ticked up, IMF data showed on Monday. Dollar-equivalent amounts dropped also among holdings in euro, pound sterling, yuan, yen, Swiss franc and Australian and Canadian dollars, with only the latter showing a tick up in the percentage of holdings, the IMF’s Currency Composition of Official Foreign Exchange Reserves (COFER) data showed. Reported global holdings of reserves of foreign exchange fell to $12.36 trillion at the end of 2024 from $12.75 trillion at the end of the third quarter of last year. Broken-down reserves, those which identify the single currencies, fell to $11.47 trillion from $11.84 trillion. The value of the greenback rose 7.7% in the last quarter of 2024 against a basket of peers, lowering the dollar value of reserves kept in other currencies. The dollar index has fallen nearly 4% in the first quarter of this year. "I don’t expect drastic changes from one COFER report to the other because, why would you? The U.S. remains the most liquid and deep market in the world," said Brad Bechtel, global head of FX at Jefferies in New York. "The only category that has changed significantly is the allocation to gold, especially in places like China, India, Russia... but the COFER data doesn’t really pick that up." The percentage of dollar-amount holdings reported in dollars edged up to 57.8% of the disaggregated total from 57.3%, and that in loonies ticked up to 2.77% from 2.74%. Euro holdings dropped to 19.8% from 20.0%, while the share of holdings in sterling fell to 4.73% from 4.98%. The share of holdings in yuan was unchanged at 2.18% and yen was little changed at 5.82% from 5.83%.

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