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Bank of Thailand Intervenes to Manage Baht's Exchange Rate


webfact

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7 hours ago, webfact said:

The Bank of Thailand has confirmed its active intervention to manage the value of the baht against the US dollar

So while BoT has talked about dedollarizinIng and joining BRIC as the foundation currencies  for international transactions, it has yet to actually dedollarize. That makes sense not to do so especially if Thailand wants to be a "Currency Hub" for Southeast Asia.

Looking at the currencies of BRIC nations  (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Iran, Egypt, Ethiopia, and the United Arab Emirates), what do any of them aside from China's yuan have any trade relevance in Southeast Asia?

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14 minutes ago, koolkarl said:

Bank of Thailand intervenes all the time, this is not an exception.  The baht is a controlled currency.  One cannot buy or sell as much as they like and I am referring to hundreds of thousands of dollars or millions worth.  It makes extensive use of a USD swap line  they have in place with the federal reserve printing press.  All currencies are monopoly money with nothing behind them except the sheep's confidence.  I am surprised this Ponzi scheme has lasted as long as it has. 

There are no USD swaps with the US Fed but BOT does make extensive use of USD futures. It has been estimated that the value of those future operations equal up to 50% of the FCR's which adds to the picture of currency manipulation. But with commodities such as oil priced in USD, and Thailand being a  net importer of oil, USD futures make huge sence.

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3 minutes ago, Jiggo said:

So they can go home earlier 

Well of course the best tourists  would not even leave their home (pod)  just visit virtually and send the money via a government Central Bank Digital Currency  transfer ...so quick and convenient  don't even have to get up off the sofa I'm just loving it 🤢

 

  https://external-content.duckduckgo.com/iu/?u=https%3A%2F%2Ftse2.mm.bing.net%2Fth%3Fid%3DOIP.WI1nkerE1au5mUUqytv2DQHaFP%26pid%3DApi&f=1&ipt=a0c1fc0d5efdedcdd0ef12b7255eac3373ee8f516fb53ba5a8f44530a4d69a4a&ipo=images

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5 hours ago, chiang mai said:

You don't go to a social network forum expecting to read expert financial or economics advice, you come hear to read opinions. If you want expert advice, you're altogether in the wrong place. Try Bloomberg as a start and see where that takes you.

Extremely sorry to have burst your bubble and offended you.

The subject is here,so why hunt elsewhere. 

Good for everyone to know the correct version instead of reading thrash on these important subject. 

Where did I go wrong? Other than bursting your bubble? 

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3 minutes ago, ravip said:

Extremely sorry to have burst your bubble and offended you.

The subject is here,so why hunt elsewhere. 

Good for everyone to know the correct version instead of reading thrash on these important subject. 

Where did I go wrong? Other than bursting your bubble? 

I do not understand  your question but really don't need to, so don't bother trying to explain whatever it is you're trying to ask.

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Quote

They got it all wrong....this is not about a strong baht or any other currency....it is all about a weak dollar.

 

More to the point a deliberate weak dollar which both candidates want to have so they wont have to confront the Deep State that controls the dollar keeping it afloat the only way they know how, printing.

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Quote

 

They got it all wrong....this is not about a strong baht or any other currency....it is all about a weak dollar.

What about the pound or euro it's not just the dollar.

 

 

The central banks are both in lock step.

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This is the second time I've seen this in the news in last few years.

Let me get this straight. Maybe I'm misunderstanding. 

Anytime the Thai baht begins to progress and get more valuable people freak out and step in to stifle and put a stop to it?

Isn't this something that most countries celebrate?

To me that would seem to suggest that Thailand purposefully limits itself and it's priority is more of being a cheap hub for cheap tourists rather than aspiring to progress to be a stronger country financially (eg. Singapore) ?

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9 minutes ago, sikishrory said:

This is the second time I've seen this in the news in last few years.

Let me get this straight. Maybe I'm misunderstanding. 

Anytime the Thai baht begins to progress and get more valuable people freak out and step in to stifle and put a stop to it?

Isn't this something that most countries celebrate?

To me that would seem to suggest that Thailand purposefully limits itself and it's priority is more of being a cheap hub for cheap tourists rather than aspiring to progress to be a stronger country financially (eg. Singapore) ?

Absolutely true. But many here thinks it's bad - of course, us foreigners will get less Bahts to our currency.

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15 minutes ago, sikishrory said:

This is the second time I've seen this in the news in last few years.

Let me get this straight. Maybe I'm misunderstanding. 

Anytime the Thai baht begins to progress and get more valuable people freak out and step in to stifle and put a stop to it?

Isn't this something that most countries celebrate?

To me that would seem to suggest that Thailand purposefully limits itself and it's priority is more of being a cheap hub for cheap tourists rather than aspiring to progress to be a stronger country financially (eg. Singapore) ?

When the currency is strong, exported goods (and tourism is an export) become less attractive.

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27 minutes ago, sikishrory said:

This is the second time I've seen this in the news in last few years.

Let me get this straight. Maybe I'm misunderstanding. 

Anytime the Thai baht begins to progress and get more valuable people freak out and step in to stifle and put a stop to it?

Isn't this something that most countries celebrate?

To me that would seem to suggest that Thailand purposefully limits itself and it's priority is more of being a cheap hub for cheap tourists rather than aspiring to progress to be a stronger country financially (eg. Singapore) ?

 

It's a balancing act to some degree.

 

The strength or weakness of a currency needs to match the strength of the country's  economy. There's no point having a weak currency that attracts tourists and makes exports attractive if the cost of importing oil and other goods isn't evenly matched. Conversely, a strong currency that makes imports relatively inexpensive is pointless unless exports or the remainder of the economic output can function well at the same level. 

 

Thailand's issue is that it likes a weak Baht because it aids exports and tourism whilst minimising imports because of the high costs. That leaves them with a current account surplus and a balance of trade surplus, which means a stronger Baht. If the country were to open up and import more, the trade surplus would evaporate and the currency would cease to strengthen so much. This is what the US Fed refers to when it accuses Thailand of currency manipulation which primarily is really a trade issue, not an exchange rate issue.

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10 hours ago, webfact said:

However, Ms. Chayawadee emphasized that the stronger baht is unlikely to impact the tourism sector adversely in the final quarter of this year. "International tourists generally welcome a firmer baht against the dollar, which helps them better manage their spending in Thailand," she said.

 

Absolute insanity from someone who should be fired immediately.

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BOT's  intervention to lower THB.

It means the cental bank sold their currency THB in the currency market.

Does anyone ever know the rough amount they actually sold?

 

According to yesterday's BKK Post, amount of Thailand's Foreign Exchange Reserve in August this year was:$262 billion. 

 

Bangkok Post - Central bank intervenes in baht's exchange rate

 

That is one of the reasons behind strong Bahts.

 

Regarding foreign exchange reserve, This kingdom is ranked 15th of  the world(in July 31 this year).

US was the No.13.

 

Edited by black tabby12345
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1 minute ago, black tabby12345 said:

BOT's  intervention to lower THB.

It means the cental bank sold their currency THB in the currency market.

Does anyone ever know the rough amount they actually sold?

 

According to yesterday's BKK Post, amount of Thailand's Foreign Exchange Reserve in August this year was:$262 billion. 

That is one of the reasons behind strong Bahts.

 

Bangkok Post - Central bank intervenes in baht's exchange rate

 

This kingdom is ranked 15th of  the world(in July 31 this year).

US was the No.13.

 

The reserves are held in lots of different currencies and gold etc etc but are accounted for in USD. That means the value of the reserves changes in line with the exchange rates. So I wouldn't get too hung up on the headline figure which can change for several reasons..

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