Jamaica Gleaner

The B-FXITT prescripti­on

- TONY MORRISON Guest Columnist Tony Morrison is a communicat­ions specialist at Bank of Jamaica. tony.morrison@boj.org.jm

THE BANK of Jamaica’s (BOJ) new and improved foreign exchange trading tool is up and running following a pilot in June and a seamless launch in July.

Well, one part of it, to be fair, as the BOJ Foreign Exchange Interventi­on & Trading Tool, or B-FXITT, is intended to facilitate buying as well as selling foreign exchange. However, to avoid confusing the market, the central bank opted to introduce the selling side of the operation first.

Before B-FXITT, BOJ would inform all authorised dealers and cambios, usually on the same day, that it intends to sell an undisclose­d sum of foreign exchange at a fixed price. Bids would be invited and sales were typically settled on the same day, using the previous day’s weighted average selling rate, or WASR.

The old method was admittedly simpler, but had intrinsic weaknesses.

In a dynamic market, using the previous day’s WASR would not always reflect the true market price on the day of the transactio­n. This meant that some institutio­ns may have bought foreign exchange from the central bank at a price either too expensive or too cheap, compared to what they might have paid in the open market.

Using the previous day’s WASR or some arbitrary rate for interventi­on, therefore, potentiall­y allowed some institutio­ns to exploit BOJ operations and buy foreign exchange from the central bank relatively cheaply.

BOJ interventi­ons could, at times, therefore inadverten­tly induce demand beyond whatever systemic imbalance the interventi­on attempted to address, so the problem got worse before it got better.

B-FXITT addresses this problem immediatel­y, as next-day settlement is based on actual bid prices. For full transparen­cy, BOJ also publishes a full report on the same day, which includes the WASR arising from the B-FXITT operation.

This B-FXITT report, on the day of transactio­ns, is in addition to the existing comprehens­ive end-of-day report encompassi­ng overall market activity which BOJ now publishes each working day. In addition, as a further boost to the transparen­cy and efficiency of the market, BOJ intends to eventually introduce a daily midday trading rate.

When BOJ sold foreign exchange at a fixed price, it was not a truly market-determined rate, participan­ts had no flexibilit­y, and BOJ unilateral­ly allocated the funds, all of which did not necessaril­y align with market conditions or the economic priorities at play in the system. B-FXITT mitigates these issues and levels the playing field for all participan­ts by

being a competitiv­e multiple-price tool.

Through B-FXITT, BOJ now sells at marketo determined rates, and so the average daily rate at those times are now a much more accurate reference rate. Eligible authorised dealers and cambios are now free to bid at prices reflecting current market conditions and, within the limits of the terms of B-FXITT and what quantities are offered, can bid for quantities which suit their particular needs and customers’ needs at the time.

B-FXITT also involves a transparen­t and systematic method of allocating the funds, which is fully reflected in the published report on each operation.

Lack of informatio­n

Pre-B-FXITT foreign exchange sales were not widely announced, and so, outside of reporting from a few astute journalist­s, the public was generally unaware of BOJ’s interventi­on operations. Moreover, because market discussion­s were usually more immediate than long -term, BOJ itself was not fully aware of a build-up of excess demand in the system until participan­ts could no longer postpone their needs.

When this occurred, it could result in panic buying and multiple bids, which multiplied the signal, resulting in lurches in the exchange rate. A single entity trying to buy US$10 million and asking three different banks for the funds, for instance, could be misread by the system as a demand for US$30 million.

B-FXITT addresses this weakness by providing much more informatio­n and assurance than ever before, and automatica­lly makes the market more open and efficient, in addition to enhancing stability. In addition to comprehens­ive reports on the day of each BFXITT

operation, the calendar of operations and the amount of USD funds being sold each week is now provided four weeks in advance. This advance calendar puts all market participan­ts in a better position to plan, and the assurance of liquidity gives sellers less incentive to hoard. B-FXITT also forces the central bank and all authorised market participan­ts to upgrade their market intelligen­ce and talk to each other more. The amount of money BOJ offers for sale each week will be based on the informatio­n it has available on what the market does or does not need at specific times. Where they are able to do so, it serves the interest of all market participan­ts to assist the central bank in this regard. The better the market can identify its own needs and inform BOJ accordingl­y, enables the central bank to better plan its allocation schedule to better address the needs of the market and anticipate any impending imbalances to address. However well it works, though, BFXITT is merely a means to improve the efficiency of the foreign exchange market and cannot change the overall fundamenta­ls which influence that market.

It is not intended to significan­tly influence the exchange rate, but instead, to more accurately reflect true market rates.

The ideal situation desired, eventually, is a foreign exchange market so adequately supplied by earnings that BOJ will have to cut back on weekly sales and concentrat­e mostly on buying.

Achieving this requires the formula we already know – continued improvemen­ts in economic performanc­e built on our ongoing reform programme. These include continued fiscal discipline, low inflation, improved balance of payments driven by increased exports of goods and services, greater reliance on cheaper and renewable energy sources, and competitiv­e import substituti­on.

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