The Manila Times

Proper timing urged for reserve ratio cut

- BY MAYVELIN U. CARABALLO

THE Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) on Friday expressed support for lower bank reserve requiremen­ts but reiterated calls for caution given possible adverse effects.

“We believe that [the] Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP)’s high reserve requiremen­t ratio should be reduced over time but this needs to be carefully calibrated to ensure an unchanged monetary policy stance,” IMF Resident Representa­tive Yongzheng Yang said in

Reducing the reserve requiremen­t ratio or RRR, which currently stands at 20 percent, will have to be a datadriven exercise.

“You have to look at the liquidity in the market,” Yang said, explaining that lower reserves can be ordered when liquidity is down.

liquidity tightens, then you can inject liquidity by introducin­g the [ lower] reserve requiremen­t,” he said.

Last week, the IMF said that unwinding the country’s bank reserve requiremen­ts

“However, this reform should be carefully calibrated and timed, and should aim to keep domestic liquidity broadly unchanged,” it said in a statement following last month’s

The RRR is the proportion of current deposits that banks need to keep with the central bank against the sum they can loan out to borrowers.

The Bangko Sentral has kept the ratio at 20 percent since May 2014, with of rapid rise in liquidity and credit expansion that could threaten the stability of

Central bank government Nestor Espenilla has been saying that he wants to reduce banks’ required reserves, a move monetary authoritie­s will have to manage

to ensure that the additional liquid

“The reserve requiremen­t is something that I would like to personally see [go] to single-digit level,” he declared in October.

“Our game plan is to do it in such as way to avoid the situation that we are unleashing too much liquidity that the economy is unable to absorb,” he said.

Like Yang, Espenilla said a capital outflows could spur implementa­tion.

“That is a good time to inject liquidity by lowering reserves,” he said.

Capital market improvemen­ts can also pave way to a lower reserve requiremen­t, Espenilla said.

“We want to see developmen­t among instrument­s and more government securities issued. When that happens, that will also allow a venue for absorbing the liquidity that we will release when we lower the reserve requiremen­t in stages, not in one giant reduction overnight,” he explained.

In a recent report, HSBC econo could announce a 100-basis point cut in the RRR by the end of the

“We believe that a RRR cut in the near future would be timely, given the recent increase in Treasury bonds and T-bills issuance

He pointed out that monetary authoritie­s had already started laying the groundwork for a cut by outlining a reform plan to deepen the country’s financial markets.

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