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FOREX-Virus spread beyond China drives investors to dollars

Published 24/02/2020, 03:30
© Reuters.  FOREX-Virus spread beyond China drives investors to dollars
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* Italy, S. Korea, Iran new frontiers in coronavirus spread

* Aussie, kiwi slide as outbreak's pace sparks new fears

* Yen left behind as gold and bonds rally

* Graphic: World FX rates in 2020 https://tmsnrt.rs/2RBWI5E

By Tom Westbrook

SINGAPORE, Feb 24 (Reuters) - Asian currencies slid on

Monday as the rapid spread of the coronavirus outside China

drove fears of a pandemic and sent investors flocking to gold

and the dollar for safety.

Italy, South Korea and Iran posted sharp rises in infections

over the weekend. South Korea now has more than 760 cases, Italy

more than 150 and Iran 43 cases. The World Health Organization said it was worried about the

growing number without any clear link to the epicentre of the

outbreak in China. "The omens are not particularly good today," said Ray

Attrill, head of FX strategy at National Australia Bank in

Sydney. "The presumption was that we would see intermediate

supply chains quickly reconnected and I think the market's had

to go through a period of questioning that logic."

The Chinese, Australian, New Zealand, Singapore and Taiwan

currencies were all on the back foot, with the Aussie carving a

fresh 11-year low in early trade.

The Korean won KRW= plunged nearly 1% to a six-month low.

EMRG/FRX

Political turmoil in Malaysia added pressure to the ringgit

MYR= and sent it 0.6% lower to its weakest since September.

Yet risk aversion, which also saw stocks tumble and gold and

bonds rise, offered surprisingly little support to the yen

JPY= . MKTS/GLOB

After partially recovering last week's drop on Friday, it

traded flat at 111.55 per dollar as Asian investors discount its

safety value owing to Japan's virus exposure.

"The market reaction to the coronavirus appears to be

evolving, beginning to differentiate the currencies vulnerable

to the virus from the rest," Barclays analysts said in a note.

"U.S. dollar assets provide relative attractiveness," they

wrote. "In fact, our economists forecast no impact on U.S.

growth from Covid-19, with relatively few domestic incidents and

a low dependency on China's economy."

Against a basket of currencies =USD , the dollar crept back

toward an almost three-year peak touched last week, before soft

economic data knocked it from its perch on Friday. It was firmer against the euro at $1.0827 EUR= and pound

at $1.2946 GBP= . It last traded at $0.6613 per Australian

dollar AUD=D3 $0.6324 per kiwi NZD=D3 . AUD/

The coronavirus has killed more than 2,400 people in China,

which also accounts for 98% of global diagnoses. Four Chinese

provinces on Monday lowered their emergency response measures as

domestic containment efforts seem to be working. However, the weekend's spread outside of China appears to

have caught authorities off-guard.

Italy has halted the carnival of Venice, shut schools, and

sealed off affected towns across its wealthy north, but is

struggling to find out how and where the virus' spread began.

South Korea is on high alert and battling to stem steep

rises in infections - all adding to the already massive

disruption to the world's economy. "From here on, a lot will depend on how fast China can

resume production and contain negative implications for supply

chains and global economic growth," said Stephen Innes, Asia

Pacific Market Strategist at AxiCorp.

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