I trade from Singapore. But my students and trading group members are spread across Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, and Manila. The last 48 hours have been brutal for a lot of them.
Gold dropped over $100. The dollar hit a one-year high. For SEA traders, that is a double hit that most Western analysis does not talk about.
Why SEA Traders Get Hit Twice
Gold is priced in USD globally. When the dollar strengthens, gold in USD terms falls. That is the first hit.
But unlike a US-based trader, you are also holding a local currency that is getting smashed by the same dollar strength. The Indonesian rupiah, Malaysian ringgit, Thai baht — all under pressure. So your buying power in dollar-denominated markets shrinks at the same time your gold position is dropping.
I checked the numbers this morning. The rupiah lost over 2% against the dollar this month alone. That means a trader in Jakarta effectively lost more than a US trader on the same gold trade, because their deposit (in IDR) buys fewer dollars now.
What This Means for Your Trading
The most common mistake I see from newer traders in SEA is thinking about gold only in dollar terms. You need to think in terms of your local currency too.
If you are trading XAUUSD from a rupiah-based account, a $4,000 gold price is actually a premium compared to what it was three months ago — because the dollar strengthened against the rupiah in between.
Does that mean you should not trade gold? No. It means you need to account for the currency overlay when sizing your positions. If your deposit currency is depreciating, your effective risk per pip is higher. Adjust your lot size down to compensate.
The Bigger Picture for Asia
A strong dollar is not necessarily bad for everyone in the region. Export-driven economies like Vietnam and Malaysia actually benefit from a weaker local currency — their goods become cheaper internationally. But for gold traders specifically, the environment is tough.
The real question is whether Asian central banks will step in to support their currencies. If Bank Indonesia or Bank Negara Malaysia start hiking rates to defend their currencies, that could create further headwinds for gold in the region.
How I Am Trading This
I am keeping my positions smaller than usual and focusing on short-term trades (15-minute to 1-hour charts) rather than holding overnight. The overnight risk from USD moves is too high right now.
I also increased my stop-loss buffers. Normally I place stops at 1.5x ATR. Right now I am using 2x ATR. The volatility is real and tight stops will get picked off.
For my students in SEA, my advice is uniform: reduce leverage, reduce size, and do not try to pick a bottom on gold just because it hit $4,000. The dollar trend is still up and until that changes, gold will struggle to sustain any rally.