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Emerging Asian currencies and equities were subdued on Monday, with the Lunar New Year holiday keeping volumes light while focus was on elections in Indonesia and the Philippines central bank’s policy decision due this week.

The Philippine peso fell 0.3% and stocks retreated 0.2%.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) is set to meet on Thursday to review interest rates. Regional central banks have so far remained in a holding pattern with Bank of Thailand and the Reserve Bank of India keeping key rates unchanged last week.

The BSP said last week that it deems it necessary to keep monetary policy settings “sufficiently tight” until a sustained downtrend in inflation becomes evident, even as data showed that annual inflation increased at its slowest pace in over three years in January.

The Philippine central bank has raised its benchmark interest rate by 450 basis points since May 2022, including an off-cycle hike in October last year. However, it kept the rate steady at 6.5% at its final two policy meetings of 2023.

Holiday-hit Asian markets mixed, Wall St record fails to inspire

“BSP will probably wait for the Fed to cut first before considering an adjustment,” Nicholas Mapa, a senior economist at ING, said.

“Given however that inflation has fallen sharply due to favorable base effects and supply side remedies, we do see the BSP cutting rates shortly after the Fed does.”

He expects the Philippine markets to take their cue from the region in the near term, with the peso’s upside likely to be constrained by the current account dynamics.

The Indonesian rupiah inched 0.1% higher and stocks in Jakarta rose as much as 0.7% to a one-month high.

Indonesia is set to hold simultaneous presidential and legislative elections on Wednesday, where citizens will choose a new president and vice president, a parliament, and lawmakers among 20,000 administrative posts across the country.

Most Asian markets were closed for Lunar New Year celebrations, including mainland China, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Malaysia.

Investors are waiting to see what Chinese authorities would do next to shore up the country’s battered stock market after appointing a new markets regulator just before the break.

A raft of regulatory measures to defend the stock market this year, including suspending brokerages from borrowing shares for lending, curbing margin-lending and other derivatives, and even getting exchanges to halt selling by hedge funds, have barely helped.

Stocks in Shanghai are down 3.7% so far this year, the worst performer in Asia.

Gross domestic product (GDP) data from Malaysia and Singapore are also in focus this week, along with January inflation data from the United States.

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