China Daily

Following suit

Hong Kong raises base rate after US rate hike

- By DUAN TING in Hong Kong tingduan@chinadaily­hk.com

Hong Kong raised its interest rates by a quarter point to 1 percent on Thursday, with immediate effect according to a preset formula, for the first time in a year, following the 25-basis point upward shift of US federal funds rate last night.

Norman Chan Tak-Lam, chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, said the increase of US interest rates earlier is within expectatio­n and a gradual path of interest rate hike in the next three years is expected, adding that Hong Kong interest rate will over time track US dollar interest rate movements.

Chan elaborated that the pace of US monetary policy normalizat­ion remains uncertain due to the tightening labor market, rising energy and commodity prices, and the fiscal policy of the incoming US administra­tion. The three factors may have a significan­t impact on inflation and inflatione­xpectation going forward.

While the pace of US monetary policy normalizat­ion is set to have some impacts on capital flows, exchange rates and asset prices in the global market, according to Chan. He warned the public to stay vigilantan­d prepare for the market volatility and risk that may arise from the normalizat­ion of US and Hong Kong interest rates later on.

Chan also mentioned that the rising trend in Hong Kong dollar interbank interest rates is likely to be gradual, depending on the scale of outflows from the Hong Kong dollar, internatio­nal developmen­ts and other related factors.

According to the HKMA, under the Linked Exchange Rate System, Hong Kong has experience­d a strong capital inflow since 2008, amounting to over $130 billion, and the Monetary Base has expanded substantia­lly to HK$1.6 trillion ($206 billion), which has provided the banking sector in Hong Kong with ample liquidity and drove interbank interest rates to very low levels.

Most of the institutio­ns surveyed by China Daily expected the United States to raise interest rates once this week and there will be two to three further rates hikes by the end of next year.

Hang Seng Index dropped 397.22 or 1.77 percent to close at 22,059.40 on Thursday and Hang Seng China Enterprise­s Index decreased 64.4 or 1.75 percent to 3,621.92.

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