Cool that Hong Kong peg talk


Also pushing the greenback higher was euro zone inflation slowing to a 14-month low, which knocked the euro to six-week lows and underscored the European Central Bank's caution in removing monetary stimulus in the region.

HONG KONG: Rumors of the Hong Kong dollar peg’s impending demise have always been vastly exaggerated. This time is no different.

At 7.8321 to one U.S. dollar, the city’s currency is close to the weak end of a tightly controlled trading band that centers on 7.8, and allows for moves between 7.75 and 7.85. To extrapolate from that mundane fact that the 35-year-old anchor is about to be swept away is wishful (or fearful) thinking. 

For one thing, where’s the crisis of confidence that would force the currency board system to collapse? Yes, the city’s housing prices are bubbly, but with banks like HSBC Holdings Plc paring mortgage rates to as low as 1.25 percentage points over the interbank rate, demand for the world’s least affordable property is still intact.

Something traumatic has to happen for investors to suddenly start believing that the Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s HK$1.8 trillion (US$230bil) in U.S. dollar assets aren’t enough to back its HK$1.7 trillion in liabilities. And before they translate those beliefs into bearish bets, they have to consider how the monetary authority bled speculators during the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis.  

Why would Hong Kong’s reaction be any less vigorous now? The local currency is weak because a glut of liquidity from mainland China has kept interbank rates relatively low and falling at the same time as expectations for the pace of U.S. monetary tightening increase. The three-month Hong Kong interbank offered rate is at just over 1 percent -- half of U.S. dollar Libor. 

It’s worth noting that this situation is unusual. In a currency board system, supply and demand are reflected through changes in interest rates instead of the exchange rate. If U.S. interest rates rise and Hong Kong rates don’t, then traders can make a risk-free profit by borrowing local dollars and investing them in greenbacks (as long as they expect the peg to hold, that is).

This arbitrage activity would suck liquidity out of the Hong Kong dollar market, forcing local interbank rates higher until they are back in balance with those of the anchor currency. So the gap between Hibor and U.S. rates cannot widen indefinitely. Interest-rate parity conditions demand that they converge, eventually -- unless the peg breaks. Hence the recent flurry of speculation.

The gap will close, perhaps sooner rather than later if smartphone maker Xiaomi Corp., which is targeting a valuation of as much as US$100bil, selects Hong Kong as one of the venues for its planned initial public offering. Lufax, a wealth manager owned by Ping An Insurance (Group) Co., is also hoping for a US$60bil valuation from a float in the city. 

People borrowing Hong Kong dollars to subscribe to hot IPOs would cause Hibor to rise -- and discussions about the stability of the peg to stop. That’s what happened last September when ZhongAn Online P&C Insurance Co. raised US$1.5bil.

As my colleague Shuli Ren wrote back then, retail investors, who subscribed for more than 400 times their US$300mil allotment, borrowed in excess of HK$50bil from brokers when orders opened. That was almost a third of the prevailing HK$180bil of interbank liquidity. The Hong Kong dollar climbed from a low of 7.8252 on Sept. 5 to 7.8034 on Sept. 20. 

This is the most likely, business-as-usual ending to the latest episode of currency weakness. A rarer, black-swan-type event could occur if China undergoes a credit meltdown and mainland banks’ Hong Kong branches, which have displaced HSBC and Standard Chartered Plc as the city’s financiers of choice for customers across the border, spread contagion through the interbank system.

If capital flight caused Hibor to rise uncontrollably, devaluation might be the only choice to avoid a depression.

Impossible? No. Highly improbable? Most certainly. With President Xi Jinping being anointed as China’s leader for life, the last thing he would want is Chinese banks going belly up in the hub of the vaunted Greater Bay area .  That would do no good to a strongman leader’s reputation.

When the yuan is fully convertible, Hong Kong could voluntarily embrace it. That would make perfect sense. Until then, whichever reason you choose -- Xiaomi, or Xi -- a forced end to the local currency’s peg isn’t in the cards.
                           
Andy Mukherjee is a Bloomberg Gadfly columnist covering industrial companies and financial services. He previously was a columnist for Reuters Breakingviews. He has also worked for the Straits Times, ET NOW and Bloomberg News. - Bloomberg

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Business News

OCK proposed RM500mil ICP programme
Profit-taking in the market, KLCI down 0.14%
EPF balancing between retirement mandate and supporting members' economic survival
Asian stocks hit by US tech slide, FX subdued
CelcomDigi emphasises its significant role in protecting customers from AI-related risks
China's largest auto show showcases all-electric future, local brands dominate
Unilever beats first quarter sales forecasts, sticks to 2024 outlook
Oil steady as market weighs US demand concerns, Middle East conflict risks
HeiTech Padu targets stronger earnings growth after returning to black in 2023
PBOC may up bond trading

Others Also Read