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Third-quarter position of the Exchange Fund
The
investment environment remains difficult.
The
third quarter has come and gone. Readers can hardly fail to be
aware that it was a very tough one in the investment field. At the
end of September, the Hang Seng Index was down more than 40% from
its peak in 2007. A recent press article was accompanied by a map
of the world showing how far various stock indexes had declined in
the year to mid-October. The smallest decline was in Saudi Arabia
and even that was 26%. Of the larger indexes, the Dow Jones had
declined by 40%, the FTSE by 42%, the Nikkei by 52% and the China
Shanghai Composite Index by 66%. All this, of course happened
against the background of a financial crisis that has been described
as a once-in-a-century event and which has seen some of the best
known names in the financial industry having to be rescued or
ceasing to exist altogether. At the same time, the US dollar,
perhaps surprisingly, strengthened substantially, presumably
because funds have been repatriated to the US to provide partial
relief to the intense stress in the financial system there. This
has adversely affected the value of non US-dollar assets, including
those held by the Exchange Fund.
It
will therefore not come as a surprise that the Exchange Fund will
not escape mark-to-market losses when the final figures for the
third-quarter position of the Fund are published shortly. However,
I hope the people of Hong Kong will view them as I do: disappointing
but not unduly alarming given the current investment environment and
the nature and purposes of the Fund.
Readers will be well aware that the primary purpose of the Exchange
Fund under the Exchange Fund Ordinance is to affect the exchange
value of the Hong Kong dollar. In that, I am pleased to say that we
have been successful: the one number that has remained very stable
in Hong Kong amid the turmoil of recent months has been the exchange
rate of the Hong Kong dollar with its US counterpart. This primary
objective means that the Exchange Fund is not managed like a
conventional investment fund: its investment objectives stress
liquidity and capital preservation because the assets of the Fund
must be available to support the local currency at short notice if
required. These objectives, and an emphasis on prudence and risk
management, have stood us in good stead.
Effective risk management has meant that the Exchange Fund has not
been exposed to some of the "toxic" assets that have caused problems
in the markets. Our exposure to financial institutions that have
failed has also been either zero or very small through passive
investments that track the indexes of the stock markets on which
those institutions were quoted. We were also able to reduce
exposures in good time, where it seemed prudent to do so.
Another factor that I have pointed out before is that a significant
part of the loss, about 60%, is due to our holding of Hong Kong
equities. Readers will no doubt recall that this holding comprises
the remainder of the stocks purchased ten years ago as a major - and
successful - part of our response to an earlier financial crisis.
It is in effect involuntary because we have given undertakings that
we will not dispose of these stocks because of obvious sensitivity
about the effect of doing so on the market.
It
is also essential that we keep in view the long-term performance of
the Exchange Fund given its primary purpose. The Exchange Fund
generated a compounded annual return of 7.0% between 1994 and 2007,
which compares favourably with the compounded annual inflation rate
of 1.5% over the period. It shows that we have done a reasonable
job of maintaining and growing the value of the Fund and ensuring
that it continues to be available and adequate for its statutory
purposes. A related point is that, from April last year, the fee
paid by the Exchange Fund to the Treasury for the use of the
Government's fiscal reserves deposited with the Fund is calculated
based on a six-year moving average of the investment return. This
means that the contribution to the general revenue from this source
is smoothed out and not affected immediately by fluctuations in the
investment return. In fact, the Government will benefit from last
year's high return in this year's contribution. However, this does
mean that the Accumulated Surplus will decline this year, in part
because of the need to make this payment.
Finally, I think it goes without saying that the investment
environment remains very volatile and is likely to be so for some
time yet. A slowdown or recession in the major economies looks more
or less certain and it is difficult to see light at the end of the
tunnel. We at the HKMA will, as always, do our very best to manage
the Exchange Fund prudently in accordance with the benchmark set by
the Financial Secretary on the advice of the Exchange Fund Advisory
Committee.
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Joseph Yam
30 October 2008
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