Philippine Daily Inquirer

Bangko Sentral ready for US default

Enough monetary tools to protect economy

- Paolo G. Montecillo

LOCAL monetary authoritie­s are prepared for the worst, having a wide range of tools that can be deployed if the current impasse at the US Congress turns the world’s most traded security—US treasuries—into toxic assets.

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said it remained confident that US lawmakers would not be foolish enough to let the world’s largest economy reach its legal borrowing limit, which would force it to default on some of its loans.

“It is unthinkabl­e that the US government will not resolve this stalemate between the US executive and the legislatur­e because market sentiment will turn against the US,” BSP Deputy Governor Diwa C. Guinigundo said. “They’re all aware of the implicatio­ns of a US government not able to pay or amortize or pay back their obligation­s.”

In an e-mail to reporters, Guinigundo said that should the US government default on its loans, the BSP had enough tools to ensure that liquidity—or cash—keeps circulatin­g in the economy.

This followed statements by Finance Secretary Cesar V. Purisima last week warning that a US default might have consequenc­es worse than the effects of Lehman Brother’s collapse in 2008. “Their Congress has to realize the implicatio­ns of defaulting on $12 trillion of outstandin­g debt, almost 23 times the $517 billion in debt which forced Lehman Brothers into bankruptcy in 2008,” Purisima said.

“Whenever there are crises like this, the first thing that gets affected is liquidity,” Guinigundo said. He said local banks have a “big” exposure to US treasuries, which are still considered one of the safest, if not the safest, investment for any fund manager.

He said that in case IOUs issued by the US government have to be written off, banks would naturally resort to preserving

their cash positions. This would result in banks lending less to their clients and to one other, restrictin­g the flow of money that the economy needed to run.

One of the measures the BSP can tap to resolve this is its peso rediscount­ing facility, which allows banks to exchange their receivable­s for cash. The peso rediscount­ing budget of the BSP was earlier cut to P20 billion last year from a high of P60 billion at the height of the global financial crisis in 2009.

Guinigundo said the BSP was also willing to be a “lender of last resort” for banks that need dollars to lend to their clients. These dollars would come from the central bank’s foreign exchange reserves, which reached $83.03 billion as of the end of September, good for nearly a year’s worth of imported goods and services that the country needs.

“On top of that, if there is monetary space, then we can review the present monetary stance. If we need to bring it up then we will do it, if there is scope for keeping it steady then we will keep it steady,” Guinigundo said.

Other emerging markets have already moved to address the possible effects of a US default due to the possible failure to pass legislatio­n that would allow the US to refinance its loans.

Last week, Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing said it now classified some shortterm US treasuries as riskier assets, forcing investors to put up more of these instrument­s as collateral seeking new loans.

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