|
Exchange Fund Results for 2006
The Exchange Fund achieved investment income of
HK$103.7 billion in 2006.
It is once again the time of year when we
announce the investment results of the Exchange Fund for the year
that has just ended. This year, I am pleased to be able to report
that the Fund earned an investment return of HK$103.7 billion in
2006, a rate of return of 9.5%: the second highest absolute figure
and the fifth highest rate of return since 1994. After interest and
other expenses, the net investment income was HK$93.5 billion and
the Fiscal Reserves deposited with the Fund by the Government will
receive a share of HK$28.9 billion, well above the figure of HK$18.2
billion included by the Financial Secretary in his budget. The
assets of the Exchange Fund stood at HK$1,176.7 billion at the end
of the year, up from HK$1,066.8 billion a year earlier.
Of course it is always nice to be able to deliver
good news, and I believe this is a good result for the people of
Hong Kong. The investment return of 9.5% was 63 basis points above
that for the benchmark portfolio determined for the Fund by the
Financial Secretary on the advice of the Exchange Fund Advisory
Committee. As I have said before, this difference between the
actual return and that of the benchmark ¡V the alpha as it is known
in the investment business ¡V is a more appropriate measure of the
HKMA's performance in managing the Exchange Fund: more so than the
absolute figure as it reflects the results of our active management
of the Fund. An alpha of 63 basis points is a good result when
compared with recent years. It is equivalent to HK$6.6 billion, or
almost 10 times the HKMA's administrative expenditure in 2006.
But regular readers of this column will know that
I am a cautious man. Nice as it is to announce a good figure, I and
my colleagues at the HKMA will not let it go to our heads. I have
pointed out many times that, although the Exchange Fund has to be
invested, it is not an investment fund and investment is not its
primary purpose. The purposes of the Fund are clearly set out in
the Exchange Fund Ordinance: to affect the exchange value of the
currency of Hong Kong and to maintain the stability and integrity of
our monetary and financial systems. Those purposes mean that we
take a prudent approach to investment, focusing on capital
preservation and liquidity rather than return, and that approach
will continue. Indeed the global economic environment calls for
caution: financial markets were volatile in 2006 and that volatility
looks set to continue. The bond markets benefited from an
expectation of a slowdown in growth in the US, while the equity
markets experienced a rally in the latter part of the year because
of positive earnings figures and mergers and acquisitions. In Hong
Kong, record IPOs brought the stock market to new highs. The bond
and equity markets do not always move together in this way; indeed
we spread investments across both sectors precisely to manage the
risk that they will not.
Three weeks ago I wrote about the outlook for
2007 and mentioned two factors that were likely to affect the
economy of Hong Kong: the global imbalance and the Mainland
authorities¡¦ efforts to cool the economy. Other factors will also
affect the global investment environment: the rise in equities
markets that we benefited from in 2006 makes the prospects for those
markets in 2007 more uncertain; the buoyancy we have seen in the
global economy and high levels of liquidity have led to volatility
in asset markets that is likely to continue; uncertainties in the
global economy, especially in the outlook for inflation in the US
and other major economies, make it hard to foresee the policy stance
of central banks and trends in interest rates. And of course there
is always geo-political risk, especially in the Middle East and
closer to home in our own region. All of these are likely to make
things even more challenging in 2007 than they were in 2006, and it
would be very difficult for the Exchange Fund to achieve the same
results this year.
So, although we have allowed ourselves a modest
celebration, we at the HKMA, guided by the wise counsel of the
Exchange Fund Advisory Committee and its Investment Sub-Committee,
are not resting on our laurels. The work of managing the Exchange
Fund is continuous, and the end of the year is really just another
day, albeit one on which we take stock of progress. We will, as
always, be working hard to manage the Fund prudently and as
successfully as we can, given its statutory purposes.
¡@
Joseph Yam
18 January 2007
¡@
Related Press
Release:
Click here
for previous articles in this column.
|