The Philippine Star

Significan­t…

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assessment based on the inflation trajectory, which is essentiall­y unchanged. What we believe will matter more for the BSP now is inflation expectatio­ns,” he said.

Early last month, the BSP slashed the RRR to 19 percent from 20 percent. The move released P90 billion in additional liquidity to the financial system.

The additional liquidity was easily absorbed by the term deposit auction facility (TDF). The volume of the facility was raised to P110 billion starting this month from only P40 billion at the start of the year.

BSP Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. earlier said the phased reduction of the RRR would allow efficient absorption and mobilizati­on of liquidity.

The move is an operationa­l adjustment to support the BSP’s shift toward a more market-based implementa­tion of monetary policy, he said.

“We have heavily relied on reserve requiremen­ts for a long time in a situation of underdevel­oped banking and financial markets and limited open market operation tools. This is no longer the case for the Philippine­s. Our financial system is more sophistica­ted, discipline­d, and resilient. Our economy is much stronger today,” Espenilla said.

Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. head of treasury Chester Luy said the BSP would likely reduce the RRR to single digit levels over the next few years.

Luy said the reduction is beneficial to the entire banking industry as banks would be equipped with additional funds for lending.

Even with the reduction, the Philippine­s has the highest RRR level compared to China’s 17 percent, Brazil’s 15.5 percent, Indonesia’s 12 percent, South Korea’s seven percent, Thailand’s six percent and Taiwan’s 5.6 percent.

Espenilla said he would personally like to see the RRR reduced to a single digit level.

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