Singapore Dollar Climbs to Over 10-Year High
2025-07-01 01:06
By
Jam Kaimo Samonte
1 min. read
The Singapore dollar strengthened to around 1.27 per US dollar at the start of July, marking its highest level since October 2014, supported by steady domestic policy adjustments, improved risk appetite, and broad US dollar weakness.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore recently took a calibrated approach by slightly reducing the slope of the SGD’s nominal effective exchange rate policy band to accommodate slowing economic growth.
This measured stance has helped prevent the currency from overheating while reflecting underlying confidence in Singapore’s economic fundamentals.
The SGD’s relative stability—especially compared to the heightened volatility in many emerging-market currencies—has further fueled investor confidence.
The currency also drew support from improved global risk sentiment, despite ongoing trade uncertainties, as the benchmark STI approached new record highs.
Meanwhile, the US dollar declined broadly amid growing expectations for deeper Federal Reserve rate cuts.