The Philippine Star

Term deposit yields mixed

- Lawrence Agcaoili

Term deposits fetched mixed results anew following a suggestion from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) to pause on further reducing the level of deposits banks are required to keep with the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

The yield of the seven-day term deposits slipped to 3.7494 percent yesterday from last week’s 3.7586 percent, while the rate of the 14-day tenor also eased to 3.9084 percent from 3.9220 percent.

On the other hand, the 28-day term deposits fetched a higher rate of 3.9471 percent from 3.9416 percent.

IMF mission chief to the Philippine­s Luis Breuer said there is a need to pause on further reducing banks’ reserve requiremen­ts to address communicat­ion challenges arising from the central bank decision to raise interest rates.

“We did not see any significan­t monetary impact of those actions because the BSP offset these actions with other measures including increasing sterilizat­ion and absorption of liquidity using other tools. But we also noted that this has led to some communicat­ion challenges on the stance of monetary policy,” Breuer said.

The IMF official said there is a need to maintain the current level until inflation is on a downward path.

“So in our view, we support BSP’s intention to take stock of what has been done already and pause perhaps on further reductions on the reserve requiremen­t until inflation is clearly on a downward path and inflationa­ry expectatio­ns are better anchored. Communicat­ions as they relate to inflation expectatio­ns are vey important because perception­s have an economic impact,” he said.

At yesterday’s auction, the term deposit auction facility (TDF) was oversubscr­ibed as tenders for the P100 billion offering reached P124.5 billion.

Bids for the P40 billion seven-day term deposits reached P47.44 billion, while tenders for the P40 billion 14-day tenor amounted to P54.35 billion.

Likewise, bids for the 28-day tenor reached P22.71 billion versus the issue size of P20 billion.

From B1 The TDF was launched in June 2016 as part of the shift to the interest rate corridor (IRC) framework to guide short-term market rates toward the BSP policy interest rate.

It has been successful in absorbing the fresh funds that were released into the system with the reduction of the reserve requiremen­t ratio (RRR) by 200 basis points.

The Monetary Board has already reduced the RRR twice this year to 18 percent from 20 percent, releasing around P190 billion in additional liquidity into the financial system to support the growing economy.

The first reduction that took effect on March 2 injected P90 billion worth of fresh funds into the system followed by another 100 basis point cut last June 1 that poured around P100 billion in additional liquidity into the economy.

The BSP has raised the reserve requiremen­t ratio to 20 percent to prevent inflation from rising amid the build up of the country’s external payments position with the balance of payments (BOP) surpluses in the past few years.

Despite the reduction, the Philippine­s has the highest RRR in the region compared to China’s 17 percent, Brazil’s 15.5 percent, Indonesia’s 12 percent, Thailand’s six percent, Taiwan’s six percent, India’s four percent, Malaysia’s 3.5 percent, Singapore’s three percent, and Japan’s 0.8 percent.

“The Philippine­s has very high reserve requiremen­t on bank deposits by internatio­nal comparison. There is no question to us that reducing the reserve requiremen­t is a good thing. The question is when to do it and by how much,” Breuer said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines