Fed's Lower Rates Pressure The combination of the world's fastest economic growth, the highest inflation rate in 11 years and the rising cost of intervention will force gains in the yuan to accelerate, even as policy makers in Beijing resist calls from the West to let the currency appreciate at a faster pace, say Pacific Investment Management Co. and Pictet & Cie., Switzerland's largest closely held private bank. Central bankers in ``You're likely to see less intervention,'' said Ramin Toloui, who helps oversee more than $60 billion in emerging- market bonds and currencies at Newport Beach, California-based Pimco. ``Several Asian central banks see more rapid exchange- rate appreciation as an important tool to fight inflation.'' After rising 7 percent last year, the yuan has appreciated 1.9 percent to 7.1657 per dollar so far in 2008. New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co., the world's ninth-biggest currency trader, predicts a further 14 percent increase, while Citigroup Inc. in Inflation While the International Monetary Fund expects growth in Asian emerging markets will slow to 8.6 percent in 2008 from 9.6 percent last year, that's still six times faster than the 1.5 percent expansion predicted for the Consumer prices in the region's 10 largest economies outside ``We are long Asian currencies,'' said Donald Amstad, head of Asia-Pacific fixed-income at Aberdeen, Scotland-based Aberdeen Asset Management Plc, which oversees $205 billion. `` To keep their currencies from appreciating too fast and hurting exporters, Asian central banks have bought U.S. dollars, accumulating $4 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves. |
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