Hong Kong is ready to deploy foreign reserves

Written by Writer on Monday, October 13th, 2008

Hong Kong is ready to deploy foreign reserves

MARKET STABILIZATION : Legislator Emily Lau said the would back the government buying stock to defend the ’s peg to the US dollar

BLOOMBERG

Hong Kong may use all of its foreign reserves to stabilize its financial markets, said a government official, after the global undermined and caused stocks to plunge.

“We’ll use all the ammunition if we have to,” Under Secretary for Financial Services Julia Leung (梁鳳儀) said in an interview with Hong Kong Commercial Broadcasting.

“Hong Kong should have faith. Smaller companies are already being hit by the lack of capital in the market,” she said.

Hong Kong holds HK$1.4 trillion (US$180 billion) of foreign , the network cited Chief Secretary (唐英年) as saying.

The has plummeted 29 percent since last month as the financial crisis brought down Holdings Inc and threatens a wave of global bankruptcies.

“The US ended up suffering a when the government didn’t rescue ,” Billy Mak (麥萃才), a at , said yesterday by telephone. “Hong Kong needs to stabilize its financial market by any means or see problems in all industries.”

Foreign reserves should be used to support the local currency’s peg to the dollar so as to avoid bank runs, Mak said.

Chief Executive Joseph Yam (任志剛) directed US$15 billion of government stock purchases to defend the 10 years ago, guiding Hong Kong through the that started in 1997.

“We will support the idea if there is need because the Legislative Council [] is very concerned that an will affect the public,” pro-democracy Legislator Emily Lau (劉慧卿) said yesterday in a telephone interview.

Ltd (BEA, 東亞銀行) suffered a brief run on its deposits last month after messages spread by cellphone questioned its finances. While depositor withdrawals ended after BEA and the government said the bank’s finances are sound, the incident underscored how the financial crisis has undermined confidence in the global banking system.

Shares of BEA have dropped 28 percent since the rumors started on Sept. 22, compared with a 25 percent plunge by the .

“It’s a matter of faith,” Mak said. “Hong Kong’s financial system hasn’t had serious problems so far.”

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