The Exchange Fund was established by the Currency Ordinance of 1935 (later
renamed the Exchange Fund Ordinance). Since its establishment, the fund has been
responsible for backing Hong Kong dollar note issues. The role of the fund was
expanded in 1976 to include the backing for coins issues. The Coinage Security Fund
was merged with the Exchange Fund on December 31, 1978.
The Government transferred the fiscal reserves of its General Revenue Account
(apart from the working balances) to the fund to centralise the investment
management of its financial assets. Through this transfer, the bulk of the
Government's financial assets are placed with the fund. Since April 1, 1998, the
return on the fiscal reserves placed with the Exchange Fund was linked to its overall
return.
When the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) was established on
July 1, 1997, the Chief Executive appointed the Financial Secretary as the public
officer to receive, hold and manage the Land Fund, as part of the HKSAR
Government reserves, which were merged into the Exchange Fund and managed as
part of the Investment Portfolio of the Exchange Fund since November 1, 1998.
A resolution was passed by the Legislative Council under the Public Finance
Ordinance to authorise the transfer of $120 billion from the Land Fund to the
General Revenue Account to meet the Government's expenditure requirement. A
further transfer of $40 billion was made under a similar resolution passed by the
Legislative Council in June 2004.
The Exchange Fund's primary statutory role, as defined in the Exchange Fund
Ordinance, is to affect the exchange value of the Hong Kong dollar. Its functions
were extended to maintaining the stability and integrity of the monetary and financial
systems, with a view to maintaining Hong Kong as an international financial centre,
when the Exchange Fund (Amendment) Ordinance 1992 came into force.
The HKMA manages the Exchange Fund. Apart from ensuring that the fund
meets its statutory responsibilities, the HKMA's principal activity is the day-to-day
management of the fund's assets. These are invested mainly in Organisation for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) bonds and equities.
To meet the objectives of preserving capital, providing liquidity to maintain
financial and currency stability and generating an adequate long-term return, the
Exchange Fund is managed as two distinct portfolios. The first is a Backing Portfolio,
which holds highly liquid US-dollar-denominated debt securities to fully back the
monetary base. The second is an Investment Portfolio, which aims to preserve the
fund's long-term purchasing power. The asset allocation strategy of the Exchange
Fund is guided by the investment benchmark, which defines the bonds and equities
mix as well as the overall currency composition of the fund. The details of the
management of the fund and the investment style adopted are set out and explained
in the HKMA's annual report.
On December 31, 2006, the Exchange Fund's total assets stood at
$1,176.7 billion, of which foreign currency assets amounted to $1,045.9 billion (or
US$134.5 billion). The accumulated surplus of the Exchange Fund amounted to
$507.7 billion. The fund's financial position from 2001 to 2006 inclusive is shown in
the Appendices. Foreign currency asset figures have been published monthly since
January 1997 to demonstrate the Government's continued commitment to greater
openness and transparency. In addition, an abridged balance sheet of the Exchange
Fund and a set of Currency Board accounts are published monthly.
Another function related to the Exchange Fund is currency issuance. Bank notes
in denominations of $20, $50, $100, $500 and $1,000 are issued by the three note-issuing
banks: Standard Chartered Bank (Hong Kong) Limited, the Hongkong and
Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited and Bank of China (Hong Kong) Limited. The
note-issuing banks may issue currency notes only by surrendering non-interest-bearing
US dollar backing at a fixed exchange rate of $7.80. Thus the fund enjoys the
seigniorage from the notes.
Through the HKMA, the Government issues $10 currency notes and coins of
$10, $5, $2, $1, 50 cents, 20 cents and 10 cents denominations. The value of all
notes and coins in circulation at year-end was $164.5 billion.
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