
At 6pm, the local currency jumped to 4.6200/4.6250 against the US dollar from yesterday’s close of 4.6950/4.6990.
SPI Asset Management managing director Stephen Innes said the ringgit’s ascent can continue if China adopts a less hardline position on rising Covid-19 cases there.
“Initial signals are encouraging, with China reducing quarantine times for entering travellers, a significant signal that contradicts prior (reaction) to the Covid-19 waves.
“Investors are growing more sensitive to the reopening news (in China) than the lockdowns, so hope springs eternal that there is finally some room for fine-tuning Covid controls in China,” he told Bernama.
US consumer prices cooled in October, with the consumer price index slowing to 7.7% compared to the 8% anticipated by economists. However, the inflation rate remained at a decades-high level.
Meanwhile, the ringgit traded easier against a basket of major currencies. It reversed against the Singapore dollar to 3.3527/3.3568 from 3.3459/3.3490 yesterday and slipped vis-a-vis the Japanese yen to 3.3047/3.3088 from 3.2048/3.2077.
The local currency also weakened against the euro to 4.7471/4.7522 from 4.6781/4.6821 at yesterday’s close and declined versus the British pound to 5.4322/5.4381 from 5.3387/5.3432 previously.