FINANCIAL AND MONETARY AFFAIRS
services sector. Activities organised or coordinated by the committee include opinion surveys, seminars and an internship programme. The committee has also sought the assistance of the Vocational Training Council in compiling more statistics on the manpower situation in the banking and finance industry.
Hong Kong Dollar Debt Market
The Hong Kong dollar debt market continued to grow in 2003. Outstanding Hong Kong dollar debt securities increased by 5 per cent to $558 billion at year-end. The Exchange Fund accounted for about 22 per cent of total outstanding debt. Other issuers included AIs, statutory bodies or government-owned corporations, multilateral development banks (MDBs), non-MDB overseas borrowers and local corporations. New issuance of Exchange Fund paper, mainly for rollover purposes, amounted to $213 billion in 2003, accounting for about 56 per cent of the total new issuance. Demand for Exchange Fund Notes remained steady, with an average over- subscription rate of about 4.6 times in 2003. The Hong Kong dollar Exchange Fund Notes yield curve shifted upward with the US Treasuries yields amid the brightening US economic outlook. The yield on 10-year Exchange Fund Notes rose to 4.39 per cent at the end of 2003 from 4.27 per cent in 2002. Nevertheless, as the yield on the Exchange Fund Notes was rising at a slower pace, the yield spread tightened to about eight basis points at the year-end, as compared with 44 basis points in 2002. The average daily turnover of Exchange Fund papers amounted to $21 billion in 2003.
Issuance activities of non-Exchange Fund paper decreased in the year. Hong Kong dollar debt issues launched in 2003 totalled $170 billion, compared with $180 billion in 2002. Of this amount, $61 billion or 36 per cent was issued by AIs, $86 billion or 50 per cent was issued by non-MDB overseas borrowers, and $16 billion or 9 per cent was issued by statutory bodies or government-owned corporations. Despite the decline in issuance activity, the product range continued to expand. The year saw the launch of a significant number of structured deals, such as step-up bonds with callable features, extendable notes and fixed-floating rate bonds. The Government also encouraged public corporations to take the lead in launching debt issuance programmes, including Hong Kong dollar bonds with longer maturity periods and particularly at the retail level. Recent examples included 7 to 15 year bonds issued by the Airport Authority, the Kowloon-Canton Railway Corporation and the MTR Corporation Limited in 2003. Retail interest was strong. The Kowloon-Canton Railway Corporation successfully launched a 10-year issue, the longest maturity so far for retail investors in Hong Kong. Ford Credit, the financing arm of the US-based car producer Ford Motor, issued the first retail bond by a foreign company in Hong Kong. Besides, a number of banks continued to issue retail certificates of deposit.
Fixed-rate debt still dominated the market and constituted about 87 per cent of total new issues in 2003. The average maturity profile of all outstanding fixed-rate debts at year-end increased slightly compared with the previous year.
The HKMA launched on August 1, 2003 a one-year pilot scheme for promoting Exchange Fund Notes in the retail market. The scheme introduced a new arrangement, whereby a portion of each quarterly issue of 2-year and 3-year Exchange Fund Notes will be made available for non-competitive tender by retail investors through the Retail Exchange Fund Notes Distributors ('Distributors'), namely Bank of East Asia, DBS Bank (HK) and Wing Lung Bank. In the first three non-competitive tenders conducted in August, October and November 2003,
95
No comments yet.
Private notes are available after approval.