Bank Negara new guidelines on oversea investment

Filed Under (Bank Negara) by Webmaster on 18-05-2011

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Bank Negara Malaysia will liberalise direct investments abroad, inter-company loans and trade financing facilities obtained by resident companies effective June 1 to increase business efficiency and enhance competitiveness of the economy.

 

Governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz said the liberalisation would provide support to private sector expansion of their operations and direct investments abroad, enhance efficient management of financial resources within a corporate group and to provide greater flexibility on sources of competitive financing.

 

“In other words to facilitate more efficient process for doing business and foreign financial transactions,” she said when announcing the first quarter gross domestic product results today.

 

Through the liberalisation, she said, resident companies which met the prudential requirements would be permitted to undertake any amount of direct investments abroad and would be excluded from the prevailing RM50 million limit on investments in foreign currency assets.

 

Resident companies would also be allowed to borrow any amount in ringgit or in foreign currencies from their resident and non-resident non-bank related companies, she said.

 

Zeti also said the RM5 million limit currently imposed on foreign currency trade financing obtained by resident companies from non-residents would no longer be applicable.

 

“In this regard, residents may obtain foreign currency borrowings, including foreign currency trade financing, up to the prevailing aggregate limit of RM100 million for companies on a corporate group basis and RM10 million for individuals,” she said.

 

On the central bank’s intervention in the foreign exchange market, Zeti said the intervention was to maintain an orderly market condition.

 

“Bank Negara does intervene and then we sterilise the liquidity inflows and liquidity in our financial system,” she said.

 

She however dened that the central bank relied on the exchange rate to mitigate inflationary pressures due to the volatile nature of the rates.

 

“The only instrument on the policy (to mitigate inflationary pressures) is the interest rate not exchange rate…yes, it (exchange rate) will help but we don’t rely on it because it could reverse,” she said.

 

She said the central bank had a wide range of policy measures to deal with the inflation.

 

On the Financial Sector Masterplan, Zeti said the masterplan, scheduled to be released in June or July, is expected to announce various measures to develop the market to be more integrated with the international financial system.

 

“We want a more vibrant (financial system) in Malaysia…we are a trading country with high exports and imports and high investments abroad and coming in, yet our foreign exchange market is not as developed as we would like to see,” she said.

 

Therefore, she said, the masterplan, which would develop the financial system for the next 10 years, would include development of the foreign exchange market into one of its agenda.

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Bank Negara raises interest Rate by 25 basis point

Filed Under (Bank Negara) by Webmaster on 06-05-2011

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Bank Negara raised the overnight policy rate (OPR) by 25 basis points to 3% and increased the statutory reserve requirement (SRR) by 1 percentage point to 3%, a move that took most by surprise.

 

The OPR, the benchmark interest rate commercial banks use to calculate their base lending rates for loans, was last raised in July last year.

 

The central bank hiked the SRR by 100 basis points to 3% effective May 16 as a pre-emptive measure following the build-up of liquidity in the financial system.

 

“With the economy firmly on a steady growth path, the monetary policy committee decided to adjust the degree of monetary accommodation,” said the central bank in a statement yesterday.

 

“At the current OPR level, the stance of monetary policy remains supportive of growth. The future stance of monetary policy will depend on the assessment of the risk to growth and inflation prospects.”

 

Bank Negara acknowledged inflation, which has increased globally on account of higher energy and food prices, has inched up too in Malaysia and has now hit 3% in March to average 2.8% for the first quarter of 2011.

 

“Global commodity and energy prices are projected to remain elevated during the year, with inflation in major trading partners also expected to rise further. There are also some signs that domestic demand factors could exert upward pressure on prices in the second half of the year,” the central bank said.

 

However, it noted that despite higher inflationary pressure, latest indicators pointed towards continued strengthening of private investment and sustained private consumption expenditure in the first quarter.

 

“Growth will be underpinned by the firm expansion of domestic demand. Sustained employment conditions and income growth is expected to provide support to private consumption, while private investment is projected to strengthen amid the improved investment environment,” it added.

 

In a separate statement, the central bank said the decision to raise the SRR was undertaken as a pre-emptive measure to manage the significant build-up of liquidity, which could result in financial imbalances and create risks to financial stability.

 

Economists, who were divided over whether the OPR would be raised, told StarBiz that the central bank was sending out a message that inflation was now the concern instead of growth.

 

AmResearch Sdn Bhd senior economist Manokaran Mottain said policymakers were sending out the message that they were vigilant.

 

“They’re acknowledging that inflation is putting pressure on the economy,” he said, adding that market consensus was for the OPR to remain unchanged with a Bloomberg survey showing that seven out of 16 economists expected the hike, with the rest expecting the OPR to remain the same.

 

Nevertheless, economists agreed with the central bank that the rate hikes were still supportive of growth with domestic demand now the focus.

 

CIMB Investment Bank Bhd head of economics Lee Heng Guie said there was likely to be another 25-basis point hike in the OPR in July but this, judging from the language of the Monetary Policy Committee statement, “will depend on risks to growth and inflationary prospects”.

 

Meanwhile Affin Investment Bank Bhd economist Alan Tan said the decision to raise the OPR was “a close call” as a lot of brokers expected interest rates to remain unchanged due to the strengthening ringgit.

 

“Going forward, the central bank is signalling that rising inflation will be of concern and that growth will come from domestic demand as external demand weakens,” he said.

 

Tan expects another 25-basis point hike before year-end as the central bank moved in tandem with regional peers in normalising interest rates and managing capital flows.

 

“The normalisation of the rates is important because the US Federal Reserve has indicated that there may be a hike in rates next year and if policymakers here keep rates low for a prolonged period, there’s a risk of a capital outflow,” he said.

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Malaysia key interest rate raised

Filed Under (Bank Negara) by Webmaster on 14-05-2010

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Bank Negara Malaysia yesterday raised the Overnight Policy Rate (OPR) by another 25 basis points (bps) to 2.5 per cent, in a further move to normalise monetary conditions.

The move to raise borrowing costs, through the benchmark interest rate, had been widely anticipated by the market.

Bank Negara governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz said that at the new level, the stance of the monetary policy continues to be accommodative and supportive of economic growth.

It was the second time this year that the central bank had raised the OPR, after the 25 bps increase in March.

Most economists polled by Business Times said they expected further increases in the benchmark interest rate before the end of the year.

“The rates were initially brought down under exceptional conditions, but (they) do not prevail as the Malaysian economy is firmly on the path of recovery and we expect it to improve in the remaining quarters on domestic demand, investment activities and trade with Asia remaining robust. Bank Negara will continue to monitor the situation in our next meeting in July,” Zeti said.

Inflation is moderate and the headline inflation rate, as measured by the change in the Consumer Price Index, increased to 1.3 per cent in the first quarter.

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