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Hong Kong yuan business boosted by banks' appointments as liquidity providers

Banks offered repo line to grow market-making activities for their offshore renminbi products

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Hong Kong has run out of its 270 billion yuan of renminbi qualified foreign institutional investor quota. Photo: Bloomberg

Seven banks were appointed primary liquidity providers for offshore yuan business in Hong Kong yesterday to cement the city's leading role as an offshore yuan centre, even as the market regulator urged international fund managers to apply through their overseas units for fresh yuan investment quotas.

Bank of China, BNP Paribas, China Construction Bank, Citibank, HSBC, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and Standard Chartered Bank beat nine other banks, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority said in a statement yesterday.

The move is aimed at helping to alleviate an expected yuan cash squeeze when the stock connect scheme between Hong Kong and Shanghai starts, and is being viewed as a sign that the long-awaited scheme is still on track. Beijing failed to launch the scheme last month.

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Each provider will be offered a repo line - the quota of collateral such as government bonds the regulator agrees to buy from a bank - of two billion yuan (HK$2.52 billion) so that the banks will be able to smoothly expand their market-making activities for offshore yuan products, including options and swaps.

The appointments are valid for two years, with effect from Monday last week.

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Standard Chartered Hong Kong chief executive May Tan said the designation of the primary providers was "a critical measure introduced by the HKMA to further strengthen [yuan] market liquidity".

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