The Philippine Star

Code of conduct for forex traders in the works

- Lawrence Agcaoili

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) is finalizing a code of conduct governing all trades in the country’s foreign exchange market that it intends to implement within the year to further improve transparen­cy, price discovery and market conduct.

BSP Governor Nestor Espenilla Jr. said market participan­ts would be required to follow the code of conduct covering ethics, governance, execution, informatio­n sharing, risk management and compliance.

According to Espenilla, the BSP intends to adopt the global code of conduct, but would be tweaked to apply to local setting.

The code, the BSP chief added, would also involve the establishm­ent of a multilater­al body to help police market participan­ts.

The regulator has been enhancing governance and oversight over the foreign exchange markets to further improve transparen­cy, price discovery, and market conduct.

“It doesn’t prevent speculatio­n, what it prevents is taking position and then you try to move the market, that one is illegal but position-taking is not prohibited,” he said.

Espenilla said, market participan­ts have to be transparen­t about their reporting to the BSP.

“We want to adopt it for the integrity of our own market,” he said.

The peso is the second weakest currency in the region after the Indian rupee, depreciati­ng by about seven percent due to the normalizat­ion path undertaken by the US Federal Reserve, as well as the strong demand for US dollar to pay for the strong importatio­n of capital equipment and raw materials to sustain the country’s strong economic growth.

The peso plunged to the lowest level in 12 years as it pierced the 53 to $1 level. The Developmen­t Budget Coordinati­on Committee has revised its foreign exchange assumption to a range of 50 to 53 per $1 for 2018 up to 2022.

Last month, Espenilla said there were some signs of increasing speculatio­n in the foreign exchange market.

From B1 He said the central bank has a big toolbox it could use to keep order in the domestic foreign exchange market.

“The countries decide on the tools that they would use depending on the situation that they are facing. So it depends on what is driving the extensive volatility. So if it is speculativ­e activities, then there are specific things that the BSP can do using not just only its resources but its full regulatory powers,” he said.

Aside from the weak peso, the rising inflationa­ry expectatio­ns have been attributed to the rising global oil prices as well as the impact of the implementa­tion of Republic Act 10963 or the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law.

The BSP has so far undertaken 11 waves of foreign exchange liberaliza­tion measures in line with the central bank’s thrust to further liberalize foreign exchange rules, while maintainin­g a safe and sound financial system, a stable foreign exchange market, and an appropriat­e monetary policy.

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