logo
#

Latest news with #HongKongDollar

Hong Kong Dollar Drops to Weak End of Its Fixed Trading Range
Hong Kong Dollar Drops to Weak End of Its Fixed Trading Range

Bloomberg

time15 hours ago

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Hong Kong Dollar Drops to Weak End of Its Fixed Trading Range

The Hong Kong dollar dropped to the weak end of its fixed trading range against the greenback, as cheap funding costs encouraged investors to borrow it and buy the US currency. The city's dollar weakened to trade briefly at 7.85 against its US equivalent on Friday, for the first time since 2023, according to traders familiar with the transactions who asked not to be identified because they weren't authorized to speak publicly. It has tumbled over 1% from an early May high when it touched the strong end of its 7.75-to-7.85 permitted range against the US dollar.

Why critics of the Hong Kong dollar peg are getting it wrong
Why critics of the Hong Kong dollar peg are getting it wrong

South China Morning Post

time21 hours ago

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

Why critics of the Hong Kong dollar peg are getting it wrong

In financial markets, the Hong Kong dollar is known as a 'widow-maker', a ruinous trade that inflicts painful losses on successive generations of investors. While betting against Japanese government bonds has been the most notorious widow-maker trade, challenges to Hong Kong's currency peg to the US dollar date back to the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis and continue to attract speculators even though the trade has yet to pay off. As recently as May 5, the Hong Kong dollar – which has been pegged to its US counterpart since 1983 and confined to a narrow trading band of HK$7.75-7.85 to US$1 since 2005 – threatened to break through the strong end of the band, as a result of a sharp fall in the US dollar amid concerns about the perceived safe haven status of US assets. This forced the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), the city's de facto central bank, to intervene aggressively by selling the local currency, unleashing a torrent of liquidity. Coupled with a surge in inflows into Hong Kong's buoyant stock market , this drove down interbank rates. By the end of May, the one-month Hibor – which serves as a benchmark rate for most residential mortgage loans – had fallen to 0.5 per cent, down from 4 per cent at the end of April. However, the sharp divergence in borrowing costs between Hong Kong and the United States has caused the local currency to weaken dramatically , leaving it perilously close to the weak end of the band. This has fuelled demand for 'carry trades', whereby investors borrow the Hong Kong dollar to buy the US dollar and pocket the interest rate differential. If the HKMA steps in again, this time to defend the weak end of the band, it will drain liquidity from the local market and push up borrowing costs. A renewed surge in Hibor threatens, in the face of a weak economy in desperate need of a sustained period of loose financial conditions. For speculators and critics of the peg, this shows that the disconnect between a US-led monetary policy cycle and a mainland China-driven economic cycle has become untenable.

Hong Kong Dollar's Volatility Fuels Talk on How FX Peg May Shift
Hong Kong Dollar's Volatility Fuels Talk on How FX Peg May Shift

Bloomberg

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Hong Kong Dollar's Volatility Fuels Talk on How FX Peg May Shift

A fresh debate about the sustainability of Hong Kong's decades-long currency peg has analysts ruminating on what might eventually replace it. It's an issue that's gaining traction after intervention by authorities to defend the peg set off a bout of volatility in the local dollar in recent weeks. The currency continues to hover near the weak end of its trading band following a slide in the city's interest rates to a three-year low.

World's Top Carry Trade Renews Debate Over Hong Kong Dollar Peg
World's Top Carry Trade Renews Debate Over Hong Kong Dollar Peg

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

World's Top Carry Trade Renews Debate Over Hong Kong Dollar Peg

(Bloomberg) -- An unprecedented disconnect between Hong Kong and US interest rates is fueling the world's top-performing carry trade — and stoking a fresh debate about the long-term appeal of the city's pegged exchange rate. Shuttered NY College Has Alumni Fighting Over Its Future Trump's Military Parade Has Washington Bracing for Tanks and Weaponry NYC Renters Brace for Price Hikes After Broker-Fee Ban Do World's Fairs Still Matter? NY Long Island Rail Service Resumes After Grand Central Fire Hong Kong's currency has slumped in recent weeks toward the weak end of its official trading band against the greenback, after local interest rates fell to a three-year low and widened the discount to their US peers to rarely seen levels. This has fueled demand to use the Hong Kong dollar to invest in the higher-yielding US currency, turning the bet into the world's most rewarding carry trade over the past month by one measure. While there are few signs of an imminent threat to the 42-year-old currency peg, its relevance is coming under fresh scrutiny at a time when Hong Kong's economy is increasingly integrated into China's and global trade is under siege. While a relatively steady exchange rate is considered key to the Asian financial hub's open economy, it brings along the often undesirable side effects of local interest rates being dictated by the Federal Reserve's policy. The one-month Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate, a gauge of funding costs also known as Hibor, dropped to the lowest level since 2022 this week. Within two months, the benchmark has slumped at the fastest pace since the global financial crisis. Ironically, a key driver of the rate plunge was HKMA's record liquidity injection early last month, when a selloff in the US dollar drove Hong Kong's currency to hit the strong end of its HK$7.75 to HK$7.85 band. The intervention has led to a fourfold increase in the city's interbank liquidity pool. Meantime, the low rates are also a reflection of anemic corporate demand for loans, as the city continues to battle its way out of a post-pandemic slump. Hong Kong lenders' loan-to-deposit ratio fell to a 16-year low in March. As the Hong Kong dollar inches closer to the low end of its trading band, concerns are growing that any aggressive intervention by the HKMA may undermine the city's nascent property market recovery and a world-leading rebound in stock listings. The prospect of such economic distortions has revived discussions about the benefits of the rigid currency peg. 'One of the arguments for de-peg is that Hong Kong's rates won't be passively affected by US policy especially when the economic situation is diverging,' said Carie Li, global market strategist at DBS Bank. 'However, there are more drawbacks than benefits for an imminent adjustment, as that could erode confidence in the peg system and hence local assets, as well as spark speculation on more changes to the currency regime.' The notional value of outstanding dollar call options betting on the Hong Kong currency to hit or fall beyond HK$7.85 reached around $51 billion on Thursday, about 25% more than the amount a month ago, according to data from the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. Trades on a drop past the weak end of the band doubled to $2 billion over the same period, the data show. In the forwards market, contracts longing the US dollar against Hong Kong's currency have registered record-high annualized carry trade returns, according to a report from Goldman Sachs Group economists led by Andrew Tilton. The peg has held firm despite being repeatedly targeted by speculative investors. Kyle Bass, founder of Hayman Capital Management, and Bill Ackman, chairman of hedge fund Pershing Square Capital Management, have both said they have wagered against the currency in recent years. Over the years, there has never been a shortage of suggestions to reform or abandon the peg, including widening the trading band, adopting a market-driven floating exchange rate, as well as anchoring it to the yuan. That said, the status quo remains the authorities' preference for now. Hong Kong's Chief Executive John Lee said in a recent local media interview that the city will maintain its currency's peg to the US dollar, citing it as a key success factor and rejecting calls to abandon the link amid escalating geopolitical tensions. The current mechanism still has its supporting factors. For one, the US currency is fully convertible and can be traded freely in large amounts on foreign exchange markets. The yuan doesn't fit that bill for now. The US dollar also dominates as an international reserve currency, while its Chinese counterpart still has a ways to go to boost its reserve status. 'It is good to peg to the most important currency in the world, before the yuan becomes fully convertible,' said Ju Wang, head of Greater China foreign-exchange & rates strategy at BNP Paribas. 'It offers an alternative for Chinese capital to go overseas and it is not ideal to introduce excess volatility to the market.' To be sure, the risk of a full-blown crisis for the city's currency peg remains remote. With Hong Kong stocks among the world's best performers this year, equity inflows from mainland Chinese investors will underpin the local currency, according to DBS Bank, adding that seasonal demand induced by corporate dividend payments may also be of help. Still, the Hong Kong dollar is likely to weaken in the near term due to the carry trade, analysts say. 'Our estimates suggest that around HK$70-100 billion of liquidity would be drained' amid official intervention, Citigroup Inc. analysts led by Philip Yin wrote in a note. 'This should bring short-term Hong Kong dollar rates to 2-3% and the currency to around 7.82-7.83.' --With assistance from Masaki Kondo. American Mid: Hampton Inn's Good-Enough Formula for World Domination The Spying Scandal Rocking the World of HR Software New Grads Join Worst Entry-Level Job Market in Years US Tariffs Threaten to Derail Vietnam's Historic Industrial Boom As Companies Abandon Climate Pledges, Is There a Silver Lining? ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Sign in to access your portfolio

World's Top Carry Trade Renews Debate Over Hong Kong Dollar Peg
World's Top Carry Trade Renews Debate Over Hong Kong Dollar Peg

Bloomberg

time13-06-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

World's Top Carry Trade Renews Debate Over Hong Kong Dollar Peg

An unprecedented disconnect between Hong Kong and US interest rates is fueling the world's top-performing carry trade — and stoking a fresh debate about the long-term appeal of the city's pegged exchange rate. Hong Kong's currency has slumped in recent weeks toward the weak end of its official trading band against the greenback, after local interest rates fell to a three-year low and widened the discount to their US peers to rarely seen levels. This has fueled demand to use the Hong Kong dollar to invest in the higher-yielding US currency, turning the bet into the world's most rewarding carry trade over the past month by one measure.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store