
Hong Kong has all but abandoned the dollar peg
Borrowing costs in Hong Kong have collapsed despite the dollar peg. — Bloomberg
INTEREST rates in Hong Kong have been eerily low, raising the question of whether the city's dollar peg is now in name only.
Hong Kong surrendered its monetary autonomy decades ago, thanks to a unique mechanism that restricts its currency fluctuation to a narrow band of 7.75 and 7.85 per dollar.
That means the city's borrowing costs move in lockstep with those in the United States, which are dictated by the Federal Reserve's (Fed) rate policies.
Currency traders have been staring at an anomaly. The one-month Hong Kong interbank offered rate or Hibor, has collapsed since early May.
The gap with the US secured overnight financing rate, or SOFR, is at an unprecedented level of more than three percentage points. Investors are now asking what caused this divergence and whether Hibor will stay lower for longer.
Borrowing costs in Hong Kong have collapsed despite the dollar peg. The first part of the story is well understood.
Last month, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) purchased the greenback amid a global dollar rout to prevent its currency from strengthening beyond 7.75.
HKMA's balance sheet ballooned while a flood of new local money pushed down Hibor.
But such glaring bifurcation from SOFR should only be temporary. When local funding costs are significantly lower, traders can borrow Hong Kong dollars and sell them against the higher-yielding US counterpart. This, in turn, will lift the city's currency and rates over time.
The fact that this rate gap has not narrowed shows there's little appetite to earn dollar carry trades. Wall Street banks are reinforcing their calls that the dollar will weaken further.
In addition, there's talk of an Asian Financial Crisis in reverse, marked by a violent rally in local currencies such as the one Taiwan witnessed in early May. What if HKMA all of a sudden decides to move the currency peg to a stronger range? Gains from the carry trade would be instantly wiped out.
Investors are right not to lose sight of the big picture. After all, Taiwan dollar's 8% melt-up last month proved painful for under-hedged insurers and exporters.
On an economic level, this trend can be a huge boon for a financial hub that is trying to regain its footing.
In recent years, businesses have complained about the dollar peg, saying that Fed rate hikes unnecessarily tightened the city's financial conditions and hamstrung its economic recovery.
Hong Kong's anaemic residential real estate, for one, could see a rebound if the current trend continues.
The prevailing new mortgage rate would be only 2.1%, versus 3.5% in early May. For a 30-year loan with a 70% loan-to-value ratio, monthly payments could be cut by about 15%, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. The value of underwater mortgages would fall as well. — Bloomberg
Shuli Ren is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering Asian markets. The views expressed here are the writer's own.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
12 hours ago
- The Sun
Senior Taiwan official visits site of new Alaska LNG project
TAIPEI: A senior Taiwanese official said on Saturday he had this week visited the site of a potentially enormous new liquified natural gas (LNG) project in Alaska that the Trump administration has been pushing hard to allies in Asia as a supply option. Energy developer Glenfarne had said on Tuesday that 50 firms had formally expressed interest in contracts worth more than $115 billion from its Alaska LNG project, a massive infrastructure deal championed by U.S. President Donald Trump. Writing on his Facebook page, Pan Men-an, secretary-general to Taiwan President Lai Ching-te, said he had attended an energy conference in Alaska at the invitation of U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright and visited the state's North Slope. Phase One of the project is expected to deliver natural gas about 1,230 km (765 miles) from the North Slope to the Anchorage region. 'Despite the freezing temperatures, we talked enthusiastically about building resilience and responsibility as democratic partners in the face of global climate change and the challenges of authoritarianism,' Pan wrote. 'In the face of trade challenges and international turbulence, we have no choice but to rise to the occasion,' he said, without mentioning whether he had signed any deals while there. The presidential office said late on Friday that Pan had been accompanied by Fang Jeng-zen, chairman of Taiwan's state-owned energy company CPC. CPC in March signed a non-binding agreement to buy LNG and invest in the project, a move Taiwan's president has said would ensure the island's energy security. If built, the Alaska LNG project will export up to 20 million metric tons of the superchilled gas a year. It would open direct access for U.S.-made LNG to Asian markets without having to go through the Panama Canal or around the Horn of Africa, reducing transit time and costs. Taiwan has pledged to massively ramp up its purchases from the United States, including energy, to reduce a yawning trade surplus that has angered Washington.


The Star
a day ago
- The Star
U.S. stocks rally after key jobs report
NEW YORK, June 6 (Xinhua) -- U.S. stocks advanced on Friday, as investors reacted positively to the U.S. nonfarm payroll report and growing signs that tensions between U.S. President Donald Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk may be cooling. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 443.13 points, or 1.05 percent, to 42,762.87. The S&P 500 added 61.06 points, or 1.03 percent, to 6,000.36, surpassing the 6,000 level for the first time since late February. The Nasdaq Composite Index increased 231.50 points, or 1.20 percent, to 19,529.95. All of the 11 primary S&P 500 sectors ended in green, with energy and communication services leading the gainers by rising 1.98 percent and 1.88 percent, respectively. Consumer staples posted the weakest growth, up by 0.18 percent. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that employers added 139,000 jobs in May, exceeding economists' expectations of 125,000. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.2 percent. The numbers reinforced the labor market's resilience, even as ongoing trade uncertainty continues to weigh on economic sentiment. "The nonfarm payrolls report came in better than expected," Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Ameriprise, said in an interview with CNBC. "It's showing that the labor market is holding up very well in spite of kind of some slowing growth trends." "The key figures in the May jobs report are better than solid, they are strong... For the Fed, this likely means they can stay in wait-and-see mode," said economists with Bank of America Global Research. Markets responded to the jobs report by pricing out a July cut and "we remain comfortable with our view that the Fed won't cut this year," said the economists in a research note. While inflation and tariffs have dominated headlines, some economists warn that declining immigration could pose an even greater drag on growth. Deutsche Bank noted that reduced immigration may have a more damaging long-term impact on the economy than trade policies. "While everyone is focused on the impact of tariffs, the real story for the U.S. economy is the collapse in immigration: down more than 90 percent compared to the run rate of previous years, equivalent to a slowing in labor force growth of more than 2 million people," Deutsche Bank's strategist George Saravelos wrote in a note on Friday. "This represents a far more sustained negative supply shock for the economy than tariffs." Tesla shares rebounded 3.82 percent after Thursday's 14.26 percent plunge, pushing the electric vehicle maker's valuation below the one-trillion-U.S.-dollar mark. The recovery helped ease broader concerns tied to the public dispute between Trump and Musk. Most large-cap tech stocks also moved higher. Alphabet climbed 3 percent, while Apple, Amazon, and Meta Platforms each gained around 2 percent. Nvidia added 1.21 percent, and Microsoft edged up 0.58 percent to 470.38, a fresh all-time high. Broadcom shares, however, dropped 5 percent despite solid quarterly earnings, as the company's outlook failed to meet expectations. In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note climbed to 4.51 percent, up from 4.39 percent the previous day, marking its highest level in two weeks.


The Star
a day ago
- The Star
Vietnam bride gifted lavish dowry of 100 civet cats worth US$70,000 to generate future income
BEIJING (SCMP): A Vietnamese woman who received a lavish dowry from her parents of 100 civet cats, gold bars, cash, company shares and several high-value properties has shocked social media. The unidentified 22-year-old comes from southwestern Vietnam and was married last May. As part of her dowry, her parents gave her 100 female civet cats, all capable of breeding, with an estimated total value of 1.8 billion Vietnamese dong (US$70,000). It also included 25 taels of gold, 500 million dong (US$20,000) in cash, company shares worth 300 million dong, seven properties and other valuable assets. In return, the groom's family offered a bride price of 10 taels of gold, 200 million dong in cash and diamond jewellery. Dowries remain an important tradition in many Asian countries, symbolising family wealth and the parents' commitment to supporting their daughter's new life. The bride's father, Hong Chi Tam, said that all his children have taken over the family business after graduating from university, and he wanted his daughter to own assets that could generate income. He said he would fully support her decision, whether she chose to raise the civet cats or sell them. 'My daughter is a business school graduate. She is fully capable of managing these assets. No matter the method, it ensures her financial independence,' Hong said. Civet cats are a valuable asset in Vietnam. A female that has given birth can be worth around 18 million dong (US$700), while a pregnant one can fetch up to 27 million dong. Their value partly comes from their role in producing Kopi Luwak coffee, which is considered one of the most expensive coffees in the world. The animals eat ripe coffee cherries, which then pass through their digestive system, producing beans that are collected, cleaned, processed and roasted. In addition to their role in coffee production, civet meat is also seen as a luxury food in China and Vietnam and has been used in traditional Chinese medicine. However, according to World Animal Protection International, civet cats are often captured from the wild using harmful methods such as box traps and snares. To fuel the industry, they are then sold to farms, where they are kept in small cages and fed poorly in stressful conditions, leading to self-harm, injury and an early death. The story, reported by ETtoday, drew a mixed online reaction. One online observer said: 'While people in China are still competing over cash dowries, Vietnamese tycoons are already giving away entire industry chains as dowries.' Another said: 'This is the real way to raise a daughter. Teaching her to fish is better than giving her a fish.' However, a third said: 'Behind the luxury is animal exploitation. We should reflect on the ethics of using wildlife in business and marriage transactions.' - South China Morning Post/ANN