Manila Bulletin

Banks’ overbought FX at $785 M – BSP

- By LEE C. CHIPONGIAN

Banks’ overbought foreign exchange (FX) totaled $784.7 million as of end-june this year which is a level that Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) considers “manageable” based on its monitoring of the ratio of net FX position to a bank’s capital.

The BSP explained that the “low ratio denotes that banks have been actively managing their FX exposures” and for the most part, means banks’ FX position is primarily used to serve clients’ FX requiremen­ts.

A bank’s net open FX position is the amount of net assets or liabilitie­s denominate­d in foreign currency that it holds. Basically, an overbought position is when banks’ FX position leads to an extended upside price movement that is consistent and with no significan­t retreat. The oversold position is the opposite, or downward price movement.

At $784.7 million, the ratio of the net open FX position visà-vis the regulatory capital of the big banks or the universal and commercial banks is at 1.9 percent, which is “marginally higher” compared to 1.8 percent same period in 2022, according to the BSP.

The BSP “closely monitors” the overbought FX position which it said has “remained manageable with the ratio of the net open FX position to the regulatory capital” of the big banks.

Based on BSP Circular No. 1120 which was issued last June 21, 2023, a bank’s consolidat­ed net open FX position – either overbought or oversold – should not exceed 25 percent of qualifying capital or $150 million, whichever is lower.

The net FX position to unimpaired capital ratio is a metric that provides valuable insights into how banks are exposed to FX fluctuatio­ns and their ability to withstand potential Fx-related losses.

Last year, even as the peso hit a record low of ₱59 versus the US dollar in late September and October, the net FX position to regulatory capital of big banks remained low at two percent in an overbought position.

The two percent ratio is actually higher than end-2021’s 1.2 percent but the BSP said this was still a manageable level which served to shield banks from the “adverse impact in case of volatility in the FX market.”

An open position is either positive or long and overbought means foreign exchange assets exceed foreign exchange liabilitie­s. Or it may be negative, short or oversold meaning foreign exchange liabilitie­s exceed foreign exchange assets.

The BSP has always assured the market that it has the arsenal to prevent speculativ­e peso-us dollar trading and that it also has enough buffer stock to defend the local currency from undue exchange rate fluctuatio­ns.

To avoid “extreme” and substantia­l changes in the exchange rate, the BSP intervenes in the spot market to strengthen the peso by releasing US dollar liquidity. It withdraws from the country’s FX reserves or the gross internatio­nal reserves to do this.

Exchange rate interventi­on and raising BSP policy rates are two primary monetary policy measures that BSP can do to stabilize the peso-us dollar rates.

In 2021, the BSP revised the limit to banks’ net open FX positions to increase FX liquidity, as well as curtail speculativ­e activity and to make sure that transactio­ns are legitimate and has the appropriat­e risk governance.

Banks’ net open FX limit was raised to 25 percent of qualifying capital or $150 million, from the previous limit of 20 percent of unimpaired capital or $50 million, whichever is lower.

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