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The
Treasury Markets Association
The TMA
celebrates a fruitful first year and looks forward to new
opportunities.
The Treasury
Markets Association (TMA), of whose Council I am the Honorary
President, held its first Annual General Meeting and published its
Annual Report on 30 April. I wish to take this opportunity to
congratulate the TMA on a very productive and successful first
year. Interested readers can learn more about the TMA at its
website
www.tma.org.hk.
The HKMA
fully supports the objectives of the TMA. The mission of the TMA is consistent with
one of our goals of promoting a sound financial infrastructure in
Hong Kong. Over the years, the HKMA has contributed to establishing
a safe and efficient, multi-platform, multi-currency and
cross-border clearing and settlement system. We are also aware that
a robust financial infrastructure must be complemented by a large
pool of talent and a critical mass of market participants, a wide
variety of sophisticated products and services to meet the needs of
corporations and investors, and market codes and standards that are
in line with international best practices.
The TMA
provides a platform to address these important issues. The TMA's
mission would not be possible without the support and participation
of the financial institutions and professionals in the treasury
markets, and it is encouraging that the TMA has built up an
impressive membership of more than 70 institutional and over 2,000
individual members. This broad-based support has provided the TMA
with a solid foundation for initiatives to serve its members and the
industry, such as the Treasury Markets Certificate and the Treasury
Markets (Debt Securities) Certificate professional qualifications,
as well as other training initiatives, to strengthen the knowledge
and skills of the market practitioners.
The
experience of the TMA also underlines the importance of public
sector-private sector partnership in fostering market development.
A key mandate of the TMA is to develop treasury products and
services in Hong Kong to meet new market demands, especially those
arising from the gradual liberalisation of the monetary and
financial systems of the Mainland. In consultation with market
participants, the TMA launched the renminbi non-deliverable interest
rate swap in August 2006 for corporations and financial institutions
that do not have access to the onshore Mainland market to better
manage their renminbi interest rate exposures. Market response to
this new product has been very encouraging. The market estimates
that over 170 transactions, amounting to over 25 billion renminbi, have
been concluded in the eight months since the swaps were introduced.
This is a good example of how the TMA promotes market
development and innovation.
The treasury
markets in Hong Kong will continue to witness many exciting business
opportunities arising from various sources. Examples include
further liberalisation of offshore wealth management services
offered by banks on the Mainland, issuance of renminbi bonds in Hong
Kong, and developments in the investment of the Mainland's large
foreign-exchange reserves. These will offer promising opportunities
for the treasury markets, and the broader financial markets, in Hong
Kong. Our treasury markets should also build on Hong Kongˇ¦s
strength and strategic location to explore new businesses or expand
their presence in the region. The volatility in global markets
underlines the need for innovative products to help investors to
better manage their risks. The TMA can play a very useful role in
developing these new products.
The TMA's
Executive Board has mapped out a comprehensive and carefully
thought-out programme to work closely with the industry to
capitalise on these new opportunities. With the industryˇ¦s support,
I am sure the TMA will continue to play an important role in helping
to maintain Hong Kongˇ¦s role as an international financial centre,
and maintaining close contacts with counterparts in other major
financial centres and on the Mainland.
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Joseph Yam
31 May 2007
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