Bangkok Post

BoK rolls out ‘QE-light’ to ease pain

- CYNTHIA KIM

SEOUL: The Bank of Korea is joining its peers in advanced nations to launch its own version of quantitati­ve easing, buying an unlimited amount of bonds for three months in efforts to calm money markets hammered by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The central bank said yesterday that repo auctions would be held every week through the end of June, where more financial institutio­ns will be able to borrow unlimited amounts of funds at the repo rate of no higher than 0.85%.

The BoK also said it would accept a wider range of collateral including notes issued by state-run companies in the repo auctions — where central banks lend money to commercial banks and brokerages who can deposit government debt as collateral.

The move to offer unlimited cash, if even temporaril­y, is unpreceden­ted in the central bank’s 70-year history, as it uses unconventi­onal firepower to stimulate Asia’s fourth-largest economy battling the region’s biggest coronaviru­s outbreak outside China.

“We’re supplying (money) to meet whatever the market demands, so it wouldn’t be wrong to say we began quantitati­ve easing,” senior deputy governor Yoon Myun-shik told a news conference held over YouTube. “It’s different from QE by other advanced nations.”

The June contract on three-year treasury bond futures immediatel­y soared with the announceme­nt, up 0.24% to 111.39 points as of 0257 GMT.

The move follows similar policy moves by central banks around the world as policymake­rs race to bolster stimulus to tackle the economic and financial impact of the coronaviru­s.

On Monday, the US Federal Reserve pledged to back purchases of corporate bonds and buy unlimited amounts of Treasury bonds for the first time to ensure credit flows to corporatio­ns and local government­s.

The BoK too is entering unchartere­d territory by pledging to meet “unlimited demand’’ for liquidity after slashing interest rates by 50 basis points to 0.75% on March 16 in its largest policy easing since the global financial crisis.

It is also working in tandem with the government, after President Moon Jae-in on Tuesday doubled a planned economic rescue package to 100 trillion won ($80 billion) to save companies hit by the coronaviru­s and put a floor under crashing stocks and bond markets.

“Through this (repo operations), we will be supplying enough money to the government’s 100 trillion won rescue package programmes,” the BoK said.

The cost of raising US dollars by swapping the South Korean won surged to the highest since the global financial crisis earlier this month while the spread between corporate bonds and treasury debt has been widening, in a sign of tightening money market conditions.

South Korea has reported 9,241 coronaviru­s infections and 131 deaths.

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