China Daily (Hong Kong)

Exchange Fund faces turbulent investment scene

- By OSWALD CHAN in Hong Kong oswald@chinadaily­hk.com

The Hong Kong government should prepare to take a bumpy ride for its E x c h a n g e Fu n d ( E F ) p e r - formance in 2016 due to a volatile investment environmen­t, a strong US dollar and reducing complement­ar y effects on investment returns of bonds and equities.

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), in its inSight ar ticle released in e a r l y Ja n u a r y, c a u t i o n e d that the EF faced a ver y challengin­g investment environmen­t in the fourth quarter (of 2016).

“Investor speculatio­n on changes to quantitati­ve easing (QE) policies has often triggered sharp fluctuatio­ns. This coupled with the strengthen­ing of the US dollar created a very challengin­g investment environmen­t for the EF in the fourth quarter (of 2016),” HKMA Deputy Chief Executive Eddie Yue Wai-man warned.

The city’s de facto central bank is due to announce the EF’s 2016 full-year result by the end of January. In 2015, the fund registered a net investment loss of HK$15.8 billion — a turnaround of its investment income gain of HK$44.7 billion in 2014. The annual result in 2015 also represente­d the worst performanc­e since 2008, when the fund posted a return rate of minus 5.6 percent in the year.

In the first three quarters of 2016, unstable global economic conditions prompted the US Federal Reser ve to keep interest rates on hold, while Bank of England and B a n k o f Ja p a n c h o s e t o expand their QE programs and boosted investment returns in the period.

The EF in the first three quarters of 2016 delivered an investment re turn of HK$86.8 billion, a turnaround from a net loss of HK$36.8 billion in the same period of 2015. In the third quarter last year, investment returns were HK$42.5 billion.

H o w e v e r, b l a c k s w a n events such as the Brexit referendum result in June and the US presidenti­al election result in November took the market by surprise, leading to short-term fluctuatio­ns. Starting in the fourth quarter last year, the US’ second interest rate hike in a decade and the halt of QE programs led to the surge of bond yields that choked returns.

The HKMA adopts both offensive and defensive tactics to deal with challenges amid the growing volatility and unpredicta­bility of the financial market.

Regarding defensive tactics, the HKMA has reduced its holdings in long-term bonds as well as increased short-term bonds and cash to lessen the impact of anticipate­d US interest rate hikes on bond valuations. It also substantia­lly trimmed its holdings of non-US dollar and non-Hong Kong dollar denominate­d assets, from

Investor speculatio­n on changes to quantitati­ve easing policies has often triggered sharp fluctuatio­ns. This coupled with the strengthen­ing of the US dollar created a very challengin­g investment environmen­t for the EF in the fourth quarter (of 2016).”

17.5 percent at end-2014 to 12.6 percent at end-2015, to mitigate the negative c urrency translatio­n effect on non-US dollar assets caused by a strong US dollar.

The proactive approach is diversifyi­ng into different asset classes based on HKMA’s acceptable risk levels. The HKMA in 2008 has embarked on investment­s in emerging marke ts and began to invest in alternativ­e assets such as private equity and overseas real estate in 2009.

Bank of Singapore, the private banking subsidiary of Singaporea­n OCBC Bank, said it is vital to add portfolio diversifie­rs such as hedge funds and private equity as well as hold more cash to formulate a moderately defensive approach in asset allocation.

“On equities, healthcare, financials and new Chinarelat­ed stocks are favored while avoiding Asian exporte r s ,” a c c o r d i n g t o Jo h a n Jo o s t e , c h i e f i n v e s t m e n t o ff i c e r a t B a n k o f S i n g a - pore. “We upgrade US equities from under weight to neutral, maintainin­g underw e i g h t f o r E u r o p e , Ja p a n and Asia.”

“We o v e r w e i g h t r i s k assets as we enter 2017 when the global economy is gaining momentum and the US government­al policy is set t o t a k e a l o a d o ff t h e US Federal Reser ve. We focus our risk overweight on US assets, natural resources and high yield/emerging market d e b t s f o r n o w,” a c c o r d i n g to an investment strateg y report by US asset manager Northern Trust.

“Domestic factors and structural growth will be the main performanc­e drivers in 2017, with the most attractive growth opportunit­ies present in the US and Asia,” elaborated Fan Cheuk-wan, head of Asia investment strateg y at HSBC Private Bank.

Looking ahead, the city’s de facto bank is actively exploring new investment frontiers in the areas of medical and healthcare sector, infrastruc­ture, inflationl­inked investment products, as well as private equity and credit investment (corporate bonds and high-quality asset-backed securities) in emerging markets.

“A significan­t increase in allocation­s to private markets (private equity, real estate and infrastruc­ture) and emerging markets, as well as a reduction in their exposure to listed and developed-market investment­s, have been witnessed in asset allocation among sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) over the past three to five years,” according to the research paper conducted by US investment bank State Street Corporatio­n and Internatio­nal Forum of Sovereign Wealth Funds, a voluntary organizati­on establishe­d in 2009 representi­ng more than 30 SWFs.

The HKMA also cautioned that it may slash the interest payments generated from the EF that may affect income of the government and some statutor y bodies, as the interest payment rate dropped to 3.3 percent in 2016. Before 2010, the government and relevant statutor y bodies enjoyed an annual interest payment rate of 5 to 6 percent in the past few years.

The EF was establishe­d by the Currency Ordinance of 1935 (later renamed the Exchange Fund Ordinance) and the government began to transfer its fiscal reserves to the EF in 1976. Since 1988, the fiscal reserves previously placed as Hong Kong dollar deposits with the EF became actively managed and hence r e t u r n s o f t h e s e o ff i c i a l reserves were linked to the overall EF performanc­e.

Domestic factors and structural growth will be the main performanc­e drivers in 2017, with the most attractive growth opportunit­ies present in the US and Asia.”

 ?? JEROME FAVRE / BLOOMBERG ?? The Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the city’s de facto central bank, adopts both offensive and defensive tactics to deal with challenges due to the growing volatile investment environmen­t and unpredicta­bility of the financial market.
JEROME FAVRE / BLOOMBERG The Hong Kong Monetary Authority, the city’s de facto central bank, adopts both offensive and defensive tactics to deal with challenges due to the growing volatile investment environmen­t and unpredicta­bility of the financial market.
 ??  ?? Fan Cheuk-wan, head of Asia investment strategy at HSBC Private Bank
Fan Cheuk-wan, head of Asia investment strategy at HSBC Private Bank
 ??  ?? Eddie Yue Wai-man, deputy chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority
Eddie Yue Wai-man, deputy chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority

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