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Thailand’s Currency the Baht is Popping Off Japanese Easing

Thailand’s baht jumped the most in 10 months, breaching 29 per dollar for the first time since 1997, as demand for the nation’s bonds rose amid unprecedented monetary easing in Japan. Stocks dropped to a two-month low.

The currency jumped 1 percent from its April 5 close to 29.02 against the greenback as of 4:51 p.m. in Bangkok after reaching 28.93 earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s the biggest advance since June 4. The yield on sovereign debt due June 2023 fell three basis points to 3.46 percent, the lowest level since Nov. 6. Local financial markets were shut yesterday for a holiday.

Today’s baht gains were “too fast” and the Bank of Thailand is ready to intervene if the currency’s moves are not consistent with fundamentals, Governor Prasarn Trairatvorakul said in Bangkok. Capital controls are not being considered, he added. Global funds bought $292 million more Thai government debt than they sold last week, adding to net purchases of $9.6 billion in the first quarter, official data show. That compares with $31 billion for the whole of 2012.

“With floods of cash in Japan where rates are so low, investors are seeking higher returns and in this region, Thailand looks good thanks to its stable economy and political situation,” saidTsutomu Soma, manager of Rakuten Securities Inc.’s fixed-income business unit department inTokyo. “And the weaker yen won’t be harmful for Thailand as it doesn’t compete with Japan, unlike South Korea or China.”

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