The Philippine Star

BSP digs deeper into toolbox, sets own securities issuance

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) is digging deeper into its toolbox by issuing its own debt securities this quarter to manage liquidity amid deep global downturn due to the coronaviru­s disease 2019 or COVID 19 pandemic that could adversely affect the country’s economic growth.

BSP Governor Benjamin Diokno said during the signing of a memorandum of agreement (MOA) between the central bank and the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) that the restoratio­n of its authority to issue its own freely negotiable securities under Republic Act 11211 provides the central bank an additional market-friendly instrument in its policy toolkit.

“Moreover, following our extraordin­ary liquidity measures to mitigate the impact of the COVID-19 crisis, the BSP will need greater flexibilit­y through the use of its various instrument­s to manage the sizeable liquidity released in the financial system in the months ahead,” Diokno said.

The COVID-19 measures adopted by the BSP, including the cumulative 175-basis point rate cuts, the lowering of the reserve requiremen­t ratio for big banks by 200 basis points, the P300billio­n repurchase agreement with the Treasury and the purchase of government securities, have unleashed P1.6 trillion into the financial system

With the agreement, the central bank’s Monetary Operations System and the Treasury’s National Registry of Scripless Securities were linked, creating the main infrastruc­ture that would allow the issuance and make the features of the BSP securities negotiable and attractive to the market.

“The BSP is looking forward to its first issuance of the BSP securities this quarter,” Diokno said.

The BSP chief said the central bank would offer BSP bills and BSP bonds depending on market and liquidity conditions. The central bank would initially offer BSP bills in view of the prevailing market preference for short-term tenors.

“In line with the practices of central banks that offer securities as part of their liquidity management operations, the BSP will consider market preference­s and prevailing liquidity conditions in deciding the maturities of BSP securities to offer at the same time the BSP will ensure that the tenors of BSP securities will not overlap with the tenors of government securities issued by the Bureau of the Treasury,” Diokno added.

Diokno said there is still a need to ensure that trading of BSP securities in the secondary market could be facilitate­d while the central bank is conducting an end-toend systems testing to ensure that the entire process from auction to trading in the secondary market works smoothly.

“With a fully functionin­g system in place, the BSP will embark on coordinati­on with its eligible counterpar­ties for market sounding activities,” the BSP chief said.

Maria Ramona Santiago, senior assistant governor at the BSP, said the BSP securities would be the considered the central bank’s main liquidity tool for mopping up structural liquidity.

For his part, Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III said a more targeted and marketorie­nted approach to managing liquidity would ensure an efficient and stable financial system.

Dominguez, a member of the central bank’s Monetary Board, said the plan to issue its own debt securities would add a “new and powerful instrument” to its policy toolbox for monetary management and enable it to respond more effectivel­y in mopping up any excess liquidity in the country’s financial system.

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