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Exchange Fund Results
for 2007
The investment results
for 2007 were good but the prospects for 2008 are uncertain.
As expected, the year-end
numbers of the Exchange Fund drew considerable interest from the
community, judging from the press reports. The investment
income of $142.2 billion, quoted in many headlines, is the highest
on record in absolute terms, far exceeding the previous record set
in 1999 (and repeated in 2006) of $103.8 billion. The rate of return
was 11.8%, which I think is pretty respectable by any standards.
These numbers are of course gratifying, although I think I should
point out that a significant part of the return - some $55.8 billion
- came from gains on Hong Kong equities. I am sure readers
will understand that the strong performance of the Hong Kong stock
market in 2007, despite a partial reversal towards the end of the
year, is not something we can expect to be repeated every year.
Indeed, we have already seen further sharp volatility so far this year and,
while we all hope this will be temporary, a degree of caution about
the prospects for 2008 is obviously called for.
I would also like to
remind everyone that, as encouraging as the 2007 results are,
investment is not the primary purpose of the Exchange Fund. The
purposes for which the Fund must be used are laid down in law and
are, first, backing the Hong Kong dollar, and, second, maintaining
the stability and integrity of Hong Kongˇ¦s monetary and financial
systems. These purposes determine the investment objectives of the
Fund, set by the Financial Secretary on the advice of the Exchange
Fund Advisory Committee: capital preservation; ensuring that the
Monetary Base is at all times fully backed by highly liquid
US dollar-denominated assets; ensuring sufficient liquidity; and,
subject to the first three, achieving an investment return that will
preserve the long-term purchasing power of the Fund. These factors
set the Exchange Fund apart from pure investment funds, which
typically put investment return first. I have said before that the
best way to assess the performance of the Exchange Fund is to
compare its return with that of the benchmark set by the Financial
Secretary: in 2007 the Fund outperformed the benchmark by 126 basis
points, compared with 63 basis points - a good result in itself - in
2006.
The investment return on
the Exchange Fund for 2007 was achieved despite some developments
that made it a difficult year for investors around the world. In
the first half of the year, we saw investors chasing higher yields
through innovative financial instruments, only to rush back into
safer assets in the second half, as the emerging sub-prime crisis in
the US and the ensuing credit crunch made investors more risk
averse. Of course, no one should be surprised by fluctuations in
markets, but last year was exceptional. For example, few would have
predicted at the beginning of the year the kind of volatility in the
fixed-income, equity and foreign exchange markets that we actually
saw, with markets here and around the world fluctuating by large
amounts, in many cases swinging back and forth several times during
the year with little or no warning. Experience during the year also
underlined how the increased inter-connectedness of global markets,
coupled with the complexity of some new financial products, can
transmit risks rapidly from one market to another, sometimes
catching market participants and policy makers by surprise.
Although some analysts were expressing concerns at the start of last
year about whether the rise of the US and other housing markets was
sustainable, no one was predicting that problems in one sector of
the US mortgage market - I recall it being described as "a piece of
a piece" of a very large market ˇV would lead to a credit crunch and
central banks acting singly and together to inject liquidity into
credit markets.
Another figure that
attracted attention this week was the payment to the Treasury of
$27.6 billion under the new fee arrangement, introduced on 1 April
last year, for determining the investment return for the fiscal
reserves. This new arrangement is of considerable benefit to
the community in that it provides a stable and predictable source of
income for the Government. The fee of $27.6 billion for the
calendar year 2007 is very close to the figure of $26 billion used
in the Government budget for the financial year 2007-08. The
rate at which the fee is set is calculated as a moving average of
the rate of investment return of the Investment Portfolio of the
Exchange Fund over the previous six years. For the 2008
calendar year, 2001 will drop out and 2007 will be added to the
calculation. Because of the higher rate of investment return
achieved in 2007 compared with 2001, and because the fiscal reserves have grown
substantially meanwhile, the fee for inclusion in the 2008-09 budget
should be higher.
It is by now something of
a tradition for me to sound a cautious note about the prospects for
the year ahead. But given the extreme volatility in financial
markets that we have seen already in 2008, with January not even
over, I am sure readers will agree that caution is particularly
justified this time. Global markets are clearly unsettled; the odds
on a recession in the worldˇ¦s largest economy, although not yet a
certainty, are believed by many to have lengthened; the sub-prime
crisis in the US, and its ramifications elsewhere, are still not
fully played out. The turbulence we have seen in the latter part of
2007 and so far in 2008 appears set to continue for at least a
while. I have described the investment environment for this year as
difficult, and I stand by that characterisation. Everyone will need
to manage their risks carefully in the months ahead. We in the HKMA
will of course continue to do our best to manage the Exchange Fund
prudently in accordance with the strategy determined by the Exchange
Fund Advisory Committee. But I hope the community will understand
that it is impossible to keep breaking records year after year.
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Joseph Yam
24 January 2008
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Related Press
Release:
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for previous articles in this column.
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