Philippine Peso Rebounds
2026-04-08 04:33
By
Judith Sib-at
1 min. read
The Philippine peso rose to 59.5 per USD, recovering from a record low reached on March 30, as risk sentiment improved following a two-week ceasefire agreement between the US and Iran in their monthlong conflict.
President Trump agreed to refrain from attacking Iran for two weeks on the condition that Tehran reopens the Strait of Hormuz.
Iran said that passage through the strait would be possible via coordination with its armed forces.
The conflict, which erupted in late February, has escalated into a broader regional confrontation, unsettling global markets and driving up oil prices.
In an unscheduled meeting last month, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas held interest rates at 4.25%, opting not to tighten policy despite inflationary pressures from the war in order to protect the economy’s fragile recovery from a recent graft scandal.
Meanwhile, latest data showed March inflation accelerated to a 20-month high of 4.1%, exceeding the BSP's target of 2-4%, raising the risk of a rate hike.