What is a Managed Float and Why Does Malaysia Use One
Explores how BNM maintains flexibility while allowing market forces to influence ringgit movements within managed parameters
Read MoreHow to interpret the TWEI and why it matters more than simple bilateral exchange rates for understanding ringgit competitiveness
Most people check the ringgit’s value against the US dollar. That’s natural — it’s the world’s reserve currency. But here’s the thing: the dollar isn’t Malaysia’s only trading partner. The Trade-Weighted Exchange Rate Index (TWEI) tells a completely different story. It’s not about what one currency pair is doing. It’s about how the ringgit performs against the basket of currencies that actually matter for Malaysian trade.
Think of it this way. If the ringgit weakens against the dollar but strengthens against the Japanese yen and the Singapore dollar, what’s really happened? Your exports become more expensive in some markets and cheaper in others. The TWEI captures this complexity in a single number. You’ll see why economists and traders watch this metric obsessively, and why it gives you a much clearer picture of Malaysia’s actual economic competitiveness.
The TWEI isn’t calculated by accident. Bank Negara Malaysia specifically selected the currencies and weights based on actual trade flows. Malaysia’s top trading partners get higher weights in the index. Singapore, China, Japan, Thailand, the United States — these countries show up with bigger influence on the number. Why? Because they represent where Malaysian goods actually go and where raw materials actually come from.
The weighting system changes periodically. When trade patterns shift — maybe China becomes more important, or the US market contracts — BNM updates the basket. This happened most recently in 2023 when the composition was reviewed. The index uses 2010 as its base year, meaning a reading of 100 equals the baseline. Above 100 means the ringgit’s generally stronger against the basket. Below 100 means it’s generally weaker. It’s straightforward once you understand that it’s fundamentally about your currency’s purchasing power across your most important economic relationships.
These two measurements tell very different stories about the ringgit’s health.
The ringgit vs. one currency — usually the US dollar. It’s what you see in the news headlines. Simple to understand. But it’s incomplete. You might see “ringgit hits 4.30 per dollar” and think that’s the whole story. It’s not. A stronger dollar globally affects all currencies, not just the ringgit. This measurement doesn’t tell you how Malaysia compares to other emerging markets.
The ringgit against a basket of 15-20 major trading partners. It’s weighted by actual trade volumes. More complex to calculate but infinitely more useful. You get the real picture of Malaysia’s competitiveness. If the ringgit weakens against the basket but the dollar strengthens globally, you know the ringgit actually performed relatively poorly. The TWEI shows the truth that bilateral rates can hide.
Reading the TWEI is straightforward once you know what you’re looking at. BNM publishes it regularly, and you’ll find historical data going back years. The index uses 2010 as the base year set at 100. That’s your reference point. If you’re looking at today’s reading and it says 110, that means the ringgit is approximately 10% stronger than it was in 2010 relative to the weighted basket. A reading of 95 means it’s about 5% weaker.
What matters more than any single number is the trend. Is the index rising over the past three months? That signals strengthening competitiveness — your exports are becoming more attractive price-wise to your trading partners. Is it falling? The opposite is happening. You’ll also want to watch the volatility. Wild swings suggest market uncertainty. Gradual movements suggest more stable economic conditions. When you see a sharp drop, ask yourself what caused it. Was it a specific policy change from BNM? Global risk-off sentiment? New trade tensions?
A strengthening TWEI isn’t always good news, and that’s the key insight most people miss. Yes, a stronger ringgit means your purchasing power increases. If you’re buying imported goods, prices fall. Your holidays overseas become cheaper. But exporters face pressure. Malaysian goods become more expensive in foreign markets. Electronics manufacturers, palm oil producers, semiconductor exporters — they all feel the squeeze when the ringgit strengthens significantly.
A weakening TWEI helps exporters but hurts importers and consumers. Inflation often follows because imported goods become more expensive. The central bank watches these dynamics carefully. If the ringgit weakens too much too fast, BNM might intervene using foreign reserves to stabilize the market. This is where the connection between the TWEI and BNM’s reserve management becomes clear. The reserves aren’t just sitting there — they’re an active tool for managing the currency when needed.
It shows how the ringgit actually performs against the currencies that matter for Malaysian trade, not just against the dollar.
BNM weights currencies by trade volume, so the index reflects where Malaysian business actually happens.
Watch whether the index is rising or falling over weeks and months. Single-day movements are usually noise.
A strengthening ringgit helps importers but pressures exporters. Economic health isn’t about the currency being strong — it’s about balance.
This article provides educational information about the Trade-Weighted Exchange Rate Index and how to interpret it. It’s not financial advice, investment guidance, or a recommendation to take any specific action. Currency markets are complex, and the TWEI is just one tool among many for understanding economic conditions. Individual circumstances vary widely. If you’re making decisions based on currency movements or economic indicators, consult with a qualified financial advisor or economist who understands your specific situation. Bank Negara Malaysia publishes official TWEI data and interpretations — that’s always your authoritative source.