|

HKD: Back under pressure - TDS

Mitul Kotecha , Senior Emerging Markets Strategist at TD Securities, points out that HKD pressure led HKMA to intervene twice this week to the tune of HKD 16.8bn (USD 2.1bn) to protect USDHKD 7.85  and the last such intervention took place in May.

Key Quotes

“Liquidity drain pushes funding costs higher, with 1m HIBOR jumping most since June 22. Spread between 1m LIBOR-HIBOR rose to close to 80bps this week.”

“HK’s aggregate balance to fall to HKD 92.6bn today, the first drop below HKD 100bn since 2008. Liquidity drain to help put a floor under HKD rates, alleviating some HKD pressure.”

“HKMA may also sell Exchange Fund Bills, similar to August to October 2017. Such action would help to push HIBOR higher. However, the HKMA would likely issue bills only when there is a shift in banks appetite for such bills.”

“USDHKD carry likely remains attractive for investors and higher US rates in the months ahead suggest little chance of any let up in pressure on the currency pair. Further intervention is likely in the day and weeks ahead.”

“There is little sign of nervousness of any break in the HKD peg, with implied USDHKD volatility not picking up significantly. We do not think that the peg is in any danger despite likely ongoing pressure.”

Author

Sandeep Kanihama

Sandeep Kanihama

FXStreet Contributor

Sandeep Kanihama is an FX Editor and Analyst with FXstreet having principally focus area on Asia and European markets with commodity, currency and equities coverage. He is stationed in the Indian capital city of Delhi.

More from Sandeep Kanihama
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD holds firm near 1.1850 amid USD weakness

EUR/USD remains strongly bid around 1.1850 in European trading on Monday. The USD/JPY slide-led broad US Dollar weakness helps the pair build on Friday's recovery ahead of the Eurozone Sentix Investor Confidence data for February. 

GBP/USD holds medium-term bullish bias above 1.3600

The GBP/USD pair trades on a softer note around 1.3605 during the early European session on Monday. Growing expectation of the Bank of England’s interest-rate cut weighs on the Pound Sterling against the Greenback. 

Gold remains supported by China's buying and USD weakness as traders eye US data

Gold struggles to capitalize on its intraday move up and remains below the $5,100 mark heading into the European session amid mixed cues. Data released over the weekend showed that the People's Bank of China extended its buying spree for a 15th month in January. Moreover, dovish US Fed expectations and concerns about the central bank's independence drag the US Dollar lower for the second straight day, providing an additional boost to the non-yielding yellow metal.

Cardano steadies as whale selling caps recovery

Cardano (ADA) steadies at $0.27 at the time of writing on Monday after slipping more than 5% in the previous week. On-chain data indicate a bearish trend, with certain whales offloading ADA. However, the technical outlook suggests bearish momentum is weakening, raising the possibility of a short-term relief rebound if buying interest picks up.

Japanese PM Takaichi nabs unprecedented victory – US data eyed this week

I do not think I would be exaggerating to say that Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s snap general election gamble paid off over the weekend – and then some. This secured the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) an unprecedented mandate just three months into her tenure.

Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple consolidate after massive sell-off

Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Ripple prices consolidated on Monday after correcting by nearly 9%, 8%, and 10% in the previous week, respectively. BTC is hovering around $70,000, while ETH and XRP are facing rejection at key levels. Traders should be cautious: despite recent stabilization, upside recovery for these top three cryptocurrencies is capped as the broader trend remains bearish.