Asian central banks brace for Fed's move, Indonesia seen most at risk
A view shows the Bank Indonesia building in central Jakarta July 11, 2013. REUTERS/Enny Nuraheni · Reuters

By Choonsik Yoo

SEOUL (Reuters) - As global markets tremble in anticipation that the U.S. Federal Reserve will decide next week to begin tapering its monetary stimulus, four central banks in the Asia-Pacific with very different comfort levels are likely to hold interest rates steady at policy meetings on Thursday.

Indonesia, the Philippines, South Korea and New Zealand have all been buffeted by stormy markets since May, when the Fed first hinted that it could finally begin calling time on the easy money go-round that has lasted almost five years.

As the shake-out in emerging markets progresses, investors have become more discriminating, sticking more easily with those economies that show good growth prospects, low inflation and healthy fiscal and external balances.

"Some markets were treated overly harshly during the latest sell-off," HSBC Global Research said in a note to clients on Monday. The reasons given for being more discerning included stabilizing growth in China, an upturn in the global industrial cycle, and some an expectation that the region will prove less sensitive to rising interest rates resulting from the Fed tapering than has been supposed.

"Amid all the talk about the end of the emerging market era....do you really expect the West to deliver growth rates beating these economies in the near future?" HSBC concluded.

Of the countries whose central banks meet on Thursday, only Indonesia has looked to be in serious danger from the investor exodus. Southeast Asia's largest economy needs capital inflows to support a current account deficit that was 4.4 percent of gross domestic product in the second quarter.

In contrast, the Philippines, South Korea and New Zealand have come through the past few months in far better shape. They have experienced outflows, but not on a scale to destabilize their markets or economies.

If the Fed does as expected by starting a gradual reduction in its bond buying program, higher U.S. Treasury yields could cause more pain for emerging markets.

But, it will also remove uncertainty, and give these central banks comfort to wait until early next year to begin raising interest rates, confident that the Fed won't be raising rates before them.

Indonesia's policymakers will await the Fed decision on September 18 with a far greater sense of trepidation.

To staunch the outflows and counter the inflationary effects of weak currency, Bank Indonesia raised its key interest rates by a cumulative 125 basis points since June.

The rupiah's troubles deepened on Tuesday as it slumped 3 percent to its weakest level against the dollar since April 2009. It has lost 16 percent since the start of the year.