A key tension exists for Asian FX. China's central bank is keeping the Yuan stable, providing an anchor for the region. Simultaneously, weak Chinese stocks are driving negative risk sentiment. This forces regional currencies into a difficult choice of which signal to follow, leading to uncertainty.

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Emerging market central banks' hawkish commentary while cutting rates reinforces market stability. This low volatility, in turn, gives them confidence to continue the cutting cycle. This feedback loop can make low-volatility periods surprisingly persistent, as the actions and outcomes mutually reinforce each other.

Despite official statements against rapid currency depreciation in Japan and Korea, policymakers likely view a weaker currency as a beneficial stimulus. With negative output gaps and competition from China, the goal is not to reverse the trend but to manage its pace to avoid market disorder and US Treasury scrutiny.

North Asian economies, despite current account surpluses, exhibit balance-of-payments dynamics typical of deficit countries. This is caused by exporters holding dollars, domestic capital outflows, and foreigners hedging equity investments. This structural imbalance acts as a powerful headwind for regional currencies, overriding positive trade data.

While the idea of US growth re-acceleration is driving dollar strength, it's not the only story. Recent positive surprises in European PMI data and upgraded Chinese GDP forecasts suggest broader global growth resilience. This breadth should help cap the US dollar's rally and may promote weakness against other currencies.

Despite investor nervousness after a strong 2025, EM currencies could appreciate against the dollar again in 2026. Analysts argue that the 14-year bear market has turned, citing historical precedent from the 2002-2010 bull market where consecutive positive years were common. This challenges the prevailing investor caution.

Despite strong export-led growth in Asia, the benefits did not trickle down to households. Weak household income and consumption prompted governments and central banks to implement fiscal support and monetary easing. This disconnect between headline GDP and domestic demand is a critical factor for understanding Asian economic policy.

While broad emerging market currency indices appear to have stalled, this view is misleading. A deeper look reveals that the "carry theme"—investing in high-yielding currencies funded by low-yielding ones—has fully recovered and continues to perform very strongly, highlighting significant underlying dispersion and opportunity.

The link between emerging market currencies (EMFX) and US tech stocks is not about the tech sector itself. Global equity markets have become a unified signal for the global economic cycle. A sell-off worries investors about global growth, impacting risk-on EM currencies regardless of their direct tech exposure.

China deliberately maintains an undervalued renminbi to make its exports cheaper globally. This strategy props up its manufacturing-led growth model, even though it hinders economic rebalancing and reduces the purchasing power of its own citizens.

The upcoming US-China summit is expected to produce optics over substance. More importantly for traders, the FX market lacks a clear playbook for any outcome. The People's Bank of China (PBOC) has firmly anchored the Yuan, removing any 'trade war risk premium' from the currency and rendering the event largely untradable for FX.

Asian Currencies Face a Dilemma: Follow China's Managed Yuan or Its Weak Stocks | RiffOn