HomeNewsBusinessMarketsAre emerging markets on the brink of another crisis?

Are emerging markets on the brink of another crisis?

The selloff spread to emerging market currencies in Asia on Monday morning, as the Malaysian ringgit hit a fresh four-year low against the dollar, the Philippines peso hovered close to its four-year low and the Indonesian rupiah hit a two-week low against the greenback.

January 27, 2014 / 13:50 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Heavy selling across emerging market currencies starting late last week caught many investors off guard, but is the market facing a repeat of last year's brutal selloff?

On Friday, the Argentinean peso posted its largest one-day decline in more than a decade, while other emerging market currencies, including the Turkish lira, the South African rand and the Brazilian real, also took a battering.

Story continues below Advertisement

The selloff spread to emerging market currencies in Asia on Monday morning, as the Malaysian ringgit hit a fresh four-year low against the dollar, the Philippines peso hovered close to its four-year low and the Indonesian rupiah hit a two-week low against the greenback. Global stock markets also took a hit, leading to a sharp selloff on Wall Street's three major indices on Friday and across Asian equities on Monday morning.

(Read more: Did the Fed sink the emerging markets?)