In early morning trading today, the baht lost as much as 1.5 percent to 36.08 against the dollar; almost doubled yesterday's 0.8 percent drop. The benchmark Stock Exchange of Thailand index slid as much as 8.9 percent, the heaviest drop in more than three years.
Other regional markets were also affected, such as Singapore Straits Times (dropped 47.34 points), Hang Seng (dropped 226.18 points) and, obviously, the KLCI (dropped 18.58 points).
This move by the Thai central bank is likely to affect both new funds flowing into this region as well as causing some outflow of funds from this region. The short-term impact for
The Thai central bank's move was intended to reduce excessive inflows, which has caused the baht to surge by 16 percent this year as overseas investors bought the nation's stocks. The rising baht has, however, hurt Thai exporters by cutting the value of their local currency-denominated profits and making their products more expensive compared with those of Asian rivals.
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