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Hong Kong's monetary affairs - 20 years on
Co-operation with the Mainland on Hong Kongˇ¦s monetary and financial
affairs began 20 years ago.
The start of
the celebrations of the tenth anniversary of the establishment of
the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region brought my memory back
to 1987 - 10 years before the resumption of the exercise of
sovereignty. It was a very eventful year indeed for Hong Kong on
the monetary and financial front.
The first
event that comes to mind must of course be the worldwide stock
market crash in October 1987, which led to a four-day suspension of
trading in the local stock market because of concerns about possible
failures in the settlement of positions taken in Hang Seng Index
futures. This is a well documented event in the history of the Hong
Kong stock market. It spurred fundamental reforms in the governance
of the stock exchange and led to the formation of the Securities and
Futures Commission.
Less well
documented is perhaps the "lifeboat" facility provided by the Hong
Kong Futures Guarantee Corporation, which guaranteed payments on all
contracts executed on the Futures Exchange, pulled together at the
premises of the then Monetary Affairs Branch of the Government
Secretariat on the 24th floor of Admiralty Centre. The late David
Nendick, then Secretary for Monetary Affairs, did a good job of
"locking up" a dozen representatives from the private sector on
Sunday 25 October 1987 to prepare for the reopening of the stock
market the next day. As the then Deputy Secretary for Monetary
Affairs, while feeling fortunate that a 10-day acting period as the
Commissioner of Banking had just ended, I was only able to help by
running errands, including seeking legal advice on the intended use
of the Exchange Fund for the rescue facility.
One of my
responsibilities was to keep a running total of the "lifeboat to
be", as each of the private-sector parties put down a figure and
signed against it on a piece of paper, at the top of which was
written: "We hereby agree to underwrite the provision of a drawing
facility of HK$500 million in the proportions set out below, and to
be provided substantially on the terms contained in the attached
letter. In the event of oversubscription, each participant shall
reduce its commitment pro-rata". The names of the institutions, the
amounts and signatures followed. I think the exact wording of the
note was drafted by one of the private-sector representatives at the
meeting. A copy of this scrap of paper, which incidentally showed
an under-subscription, is in my records. The facility, including
the contribution from the Exchange Fund, amounted to HK$4 billion,
of which only HK$1.8 billion was actually used.
But this was
not really the event of the year in terms of its historical
significance, at least in my opinion. Crises come and go, and we
all learn from them. And the lifeboat facility was, in the fullness
of time, completely repaid, with interest. Crisis prevention is
always more valuable in terms of its implications for future events,
although the behind-the-scenes efforts are often not noticed,
precisely because no debilitating crisis occurs.
The more
significant event actually occurred earlier in the same year, in
early May, when the then Financial Secretary Piers Jacobs and David
Nendick made a trip up north. I had no idea where exactly they were
going; it was probably Beijing. All I was asked to do was to
co-ordinate the production of a set of background briefs on monetary
and financial matters in Hong Kong and continue to act as Secretary
for Monetary Affairs in the absence of Mr Nendick, who had just been
to the Annual Meeting of the Asian Development Bank. I produced 10
such briefs, including a crucial one on the functioning of the
Linked Exchange Rate system. Less than four years had passed since
the Linked Exchange Rate system had been introduced in October 1983,
and I had some concerns about how the system had been operating. As
a result, that particular brief was considered by those making the
trip to be too frank and had to be toned down. But I sensed a
general agreement with my view on the subject and received
assurances that it would be one of the main themes of the visit ˇV
the need to make the monetary system robust enough to cope with the
increasingly sensitive period of political transition was obviously
on everybody's mind.
I remember
feeling dejected at having to prepare briefs for a visit, presumably
to discuss subjects dear to my heart, that I was not to take part
in. With the benefit of hindsight, it was immature of me, given the
sensitivities at the time; and to punish myself I decided not even
to try to find out where Sir Piers and Mr Nendick actually went and
whom they met. I still donˇ¦t know. What is important, of course,
is that the visit marked the beginning of a very constructive and
successful dialogue on the monetary and financial affairs of Hong
Kong that lasted for 10 years, in which the many reforms
instrumental to safeguarding monetary and financial stability in
Hong Kong in the lead-up to 1997 and beyond were frankly discussed
and agreed, with a clear sense of purpose of promoting the stability
and prosperity of Hong Kong.
If my memory
does not fail me, perhaps I shall find time to share with readers
more about this pleasing chapter of co-operation with the Mainland.
Joseph Yam
3 May 2007
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