Broad-Based Capital Injections
Hong Kong Contingent Bank Capital Facility (CBCF)
Purpose
To support stability and confidence in the Hong Kong banking system by “making available additional capital to locally incorporated licensed banks, on request and subject to supervisory scrutiny should this become necessary” (FS 2008)
Key Terms
- Launch DatesAnnouncement: October 14, 2008 Operational: October 14, 2008
- Wind-down DatesDecember 31, 2010 (HKMA 2010)
- Program SizeNot specified. The limit was the total size of the Exchange Fund, inclusive of its borrowing limit
- UsageNone (HKMA 2010)
- OutcomesNo uptake
- Notable FeaturesThe design of the capital injections was not broadly established; instead, investment terms were to be set on a bank-by-bank basis (HKMA 2008a, 3)
On October 14, 2008, Hong Kong’s financial secretary announced the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) would use Hong Kong’s Exchange Fund to provide standby capital to banks if needed. The Contingent Bank Capital Facility (CBCF) was available until the end of 2010 to shore up depositor and investor confidence in the local banking sector and commenced in parallel with a broader set of announced measures including a consumer bank deposit guarantee. Twenty-three locally incorporated “Authorized Institutions” were eligible to access CBCF capital upon request. The provisioning of CBCF capital would be accompanied by enhanced oversight from the HKMA. The Hong Kong government did not formalize the structure or terms of CBCF capital, nor did it expressly define any limits for individual banks or in aggregate. The CBCF never injected any capital and expired as initially scheduled, at the end of 2010.
GDP (SAAR, nominal GDP in LCU converted to USD) | $211.6 billion in 2007 $219.1 billion in 2008 |
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GDP per capita (SAAR, nominal GDP in LCU converted to USD) | $30,594 in 2007 $31,516 in 2008 |
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Sovereign credit rating (five-year senior debt)
| As of Q4 2007: Moody’s: Aa2 S&P: AA Fitch: AA
As of Q4 2008: Moody’s: Aa2 S&P: AA Fitch: AA |
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Size of banking system | $305.3 billion in total assets in 2007 $330.3 billion in total assets in 2008 |
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Size of banking system as a percentage of GDP | 144.3% in 2007 150.6% in 2008 |
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Size of banking system as a percentage of financial system | Data not available for Hong Kong |
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Five-bank concentration of banking system | 77.7% of total banking assets in 2007 79.5% of total banking assets in 2008 |
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Foreign involvement in banking system | 91% of total banking assets in 2007 91% of total banking assets in 2008 |
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Government ownership of banking system | 0% of banks owned by the state in 2007 0% of banks owned by the state in 2008 |
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Existence of deposit insurance | 100% insurance on deposits up to $64,500 in 2007 100% insurance on deposits up to $64,500 in 2008 |
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Source: Bloomberg, World Bank Deposit Insurance Dataset, World Bank Global Financial Development Database, World Bank Regulation and Supervision Survey |
Around the peak of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) in October 2008, Hong Kong’s domestic banking sector remained in relatively strong shape. Hong Kong’s local banks collectively had a regulatory capital ratio of 14%, which was well over the 8% of risk-weighted assets that the Basel II international standards prescribed (HKMA 2008a, 2). However, in keeping with its international counterparts and responding to growing domestic financial disturbance, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) implemented a capital injection facility. In addition to a temporary expansion of deposit insurance and several previously announced liquidity provisions, the financial secretary announced on October 14, 2008 that the HKMA would use the Exchange Fund (the Fund) to provide standby capital to banks. Under a program known as the Contingent Bank Capital Facility (CBCF), locally incorporated “Authorized Institutions” could request capital on an as-needed basis. The HKMA did not formalize the structure or terms of CBCF capital injections, nor did it make explicit any maximum investment figure—either on a per-bank basis or in aggregate. As the HKMA predicted, the CBCF was never accessed. The program was allowed to expire as planned at the end of 2010.
Because no CBCF capital was ever deployed, there are no specific instances of execution from which to draw an evaluation. However, the HKMA consistently described the CBCF as preemptory and intended to ward off the risk of the Hong Kong banking system becoming undercapitalized, even if the odds of such risk were remote (HKMA 2008a, 3; Wong and Tang 2008). In this respect, the lack of usage is consistent with success. In December 2008, the International Monetary Fund executive board stated it considered the CBCF to be “timely and warranted” (IMF 2008). However, the effects that CBCF may have had cannot be clearly separated from those of the other contemporaneous local and global responses.
Key Design Decisions
Part of a Package1
The Contingent Bank Capital Facility shared a press release with the new expansion of deposit guarantees (FS 2008), and its establishment also followed several weeks of newly implemented HKMA liquidity measures (HKMA 2009b). The purpose of the CBCF was to provide standby capital to banks during the Global Financial Crisis. Moreover, the CBCF came in the middle of a spate of capital injection programs across other developed markets (COP 2009, 12).
Legal Authority1
The Exchange Fund Ordinance, originally of 1935, established an Exchange Fund to be under the discretion of the financial secretary in consultation with an Exchange Fund Advisory Committee. During the Global Financial Crisis, the ordinance’s outlined authorities provided the secretary the power to use the Fund’s resources to affect the exchange value of the Hong Kong currency and, secondarily, to engage in stabilizing transactions that aim to maintain “Hong Kong as an international financial centre” (HKMA 2008a; LegCo n.d.). In addition to the established funds, the Exchange Fund Ordinance also granted the secretary the legal authority to borrow for the Fund up to HKD 50 billion (approximately USD 6.5 billion) via sovereign debt issuance, without securing any additional authorization (LegCo n.d.).
Communication1
Chief Executive of the HKMA Joseph Yam generally referred to the CBCF as a precautionary measure, enacted in response to adverse foreign developments (FS 2008; Yam 2008b, 12). Contemporary media coverage, however, noted that Hong Kong’s Bank of East Asia had started to experience a run in the weeks preceding the announcement of the CBCF (Wan 2008).
Yam consistently reiterated that the HKMA did not expect banks to use the CBCF, due to the perceived strength of the Hong Kong banking sector (FS 2008; HKMA 2008a, 4; Panel 2008, 11).
Governance1
Given the limited outlines of the program itself as well as its lack of uptake, there does not seem to have been any material discussion of governance.
Had any banks utilized the CBCF, requesting banks would have been subject to additional monitoring by the HKMA. Borrowing institutions would have been subject to enhanced supervisory scrutiny with respect to material deviations in risk, balance sheet structure, or business strategy. The HKMA would have required borrowing institutions to notify it before beginning or materially expanding a line of business (HKMA 2008b).
Source of Injections1
The Exchange Fund was the source of funds for the CBCF. While policymakers did not offer an explicit monetary figure, the Fund contained approximately HKD 1.4 trillion (approximately USD 180 billion) in October 2008 (Wong and Tang 2008; HKMA 2008c). As noted in Key Design Decision No. 2 above, the financial secretary could also supplement the Fund’s resources with up to HKD 50 billion (about USD 6.5 billion) of sovereign borrowing. However, the financial secretary also committed the Fund’s resources to the expanded deposit guarantee scheme announced alongside the CBCF (FS 2008).
Eligible Institutions1
This list included 23 Hong Kong banks (HKMA 2009a, 197). Licensed banks were the only type of bank allowed to accept consumer deposits less than HKD 100,000 (approximately USD 13,000) (HKMA n.d.). Notably, the deposit guarantee scheme announced alongside the CBCF expanded deposit insurance to banks outside this “licensed” classification (FS 2008; HKDPB n.d.).
Individual Participation Limits1
The only apparent limit on the amount of funding available to an institution seemed to be the available amount in the Exchange Fund.
Capital Characteristics1
HKMA would have designed the structure of CBCF investments with consideration for each requesting bank’s individual circumstances (HKMA 2008a, 3). Without a stated structure design or any ultimate usage of the program, it is not clear what kind of structure the HKMA injections would have assumed.
Other Conditions1
It appears any injections would have come with conditions that encouraged banks to replace the Exchange Fund’s investment with private capital (HKMA 2008b). HKMA Chief Executive Yam noted that banks would prefer private capital to the CBCF due to the enhanced restrictions and supervisory measures that would be attached to that latter (Yam 2008a).
Exit Strategy1
Had the financial secretary made investments under the CBCF, it is not clear how long the Exchange Fund would have held onto any shares.
Amendments to Relevant Regulation1
HKMA Chief Executive Yam stated that, alongside the CBCF, the HKMA would adopt a “flexible approach to adjusting the ‘premium’ over the statutory capital adequacy ratio” for individual banks, but it is not clear how this flexibility would have interacted with capital injections pursuant to the CBCF (Yam 2009, 8).
Key Program Documents
(HKDPB n.d.) Hong Kong Deposit Protection Board (HKDPB). n.d. “Full Deposit Protection (until the End of 2010).” Hong Kong Deposit Protection Board. Accessed January 26, 2021.
Page outlining the scope of the temporary increase in deposit insurance.
(HKMA 2008a) Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA). October 17, 2008. “Two Measures to Safeguard Banking Stability.” Panel on Financial Affairs, Legislative Council Paper No. CB(1)53/08-09(02).
Paper providing information on the use of the Exchange Fund to establish the CBCF.
(Yam 2008a) Yam, Joseph. October 23, 2008. “Contingent Bank Capital Facility.” Hong Kong Monetary Authority, inSight.
Blog post from HKMA Chief Executive Joseph Yam discussing the CBCF.
Key Program Documents
(HKMA n.d.) Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA). n.d. “The Three-Tier Banking System.” Hong Kong Monetary Authority.
Page describing the breakdown of licensed and other banks in Hong Kong.
Key Program Documents
(HKMA 2008b) Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA). October 24, 2008. “Banking Ordinance.” Hong Kong Monetary Authority, Gazette No. 43/2008.
Guideline describing the HKMA’s execution of the deposit guarantee and CBCF.
(LegCo n.d.) Legislative Council (LegCo). n.d. “Cap. 66 Exchange Fund Ordinance."
Statute describing the Exchange Fund and its authorities.
Key Program Documents
(Wan 2008) Wan, Hanny. October 14, 2008. “Hong Kong’s Stocks Rise in Biggest Two-Day Rally in Decade.” Bloomberg.
Article discussing market events surrounding CBCF response.
(Wong and Tang 2008) Wong, Chia-Peck, and Theresa Tang. October 14, 2008. “Hong Kong Guarantees Deposits, Sets Up Fund for Banks (Update3).” Bloomberg.
Article reporting the creation of the CBCF.
Key Program Documents
(HKMA 2008c) Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA). October 31, 2008. “Exchange Fund Abridged Balance Sheet and Currency Board Account.” Hong Kong Monetary Authority.
Press release announcing the balance of the Exchange Fund.
(HKMA 2010) Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA). December 30, 2010. “Expiry of the Full Deposit Guarantee and the Contingent Bank Capital Facility.” Hong Kong Monetary Authority.
Press release announcing the expiration of the CBCF.
Key Program Documents
(COP 2009) Congressional Oversight Panel (COP). December 9, 2009. “Taking Stock: What Has the Troubled Asset Relief Program Achieved?” December Oversight Report.
Report mentioning global capital injection efforts.
(HKMA 2009b) Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA). March 2009. “Operation of Monetary Policy.” Quarterly Bulletin.
Article discussing the operations of the HKMA in the fourth quarter of 2008.
(IMF 2008) International Monetary Fund (IMF). December 8, 2008. “IMF Executive Board Concludes 2008 Article IV Consultation Discussions with People’s Republic of China — Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.” Public Information Notice No. 08/145.
IMF press release discussing consultation with Hong Kong concluded on December 1, 2008.
(Panel 2008) Panel on Financial Affairs (Panel). October 17, 2008. “Minutes of Special Meeting.” Legislative Council.
Minutes of Panel on Financial Affairs meeting discussing the CBCF.
(Yam 2008b) Yam, Joseph. November 21, 2008. “Briefing on the Work of the HKMA.” Delivered to the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, Legislative Council, Panel on Financial Affairs.
Report describing global context surrounding implementation of CBCF.
Taxonomy
Intervention Categories:
- Broad-Based Capital Injections
Countries and Regions:
- Hong Kong
Crises:
- Global Financial Crisis