(Bloomberg) -- The Hong Kong dollar climbed to its strongest level in three and a half years, thanks to a year-end surge in demand that pushed the currency’s short-term borrowing costs to a record high.
The city’s currency, which is pegged to the US dollar, rallied to a level unseen since June 2021 this week. The move has taken its December gain versus the greenback to 0.2%.
Meanwhile, the overnight Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate, the local money-market benchmark better known as Hibor, soared to an all-time high of 6.5% on Monday.
Appetite for the Hong Kong dollar tends to strengthen toward the year-end as banks replenish liquidity to meet regulatory requirements. Higher dividend payouts by Chinese firms listed in the Asian financial hub and mainland investors’ stronger interest in the city’s rallying stocks also fueled demand.
The rise in Hibor “could be due to year-end HKD liquidity squeeze coupled with a low HK aggregate balance,” said Ken Cheung, chief Asian foreign-exchange strategist at Mizuho Bank. The local currency’s interest rate premium over the greenback’s and its dividends-induced demand will send the Hong Kong dollar below 7.76, he added.
The seasonal cash crunch is an added tailwind for the Hong Kong dollar, whose peg to the greenback has helped it buck a retreat among Asian currencies in the last three months. The prospect of fewer US interest-rate cuts and the expected inflationary impact of Donald Trump’s policies have underpinned the dollar.
The city’s currency is confined to a trading band of 7.75 to 7.85 per dollar. The HKMA’s last intervention to defend the strong end of the trading band was in 2020.
The funding squeeze also has resulted in Hong Kong interest rates, which typically move in tandem with their US counterparts, outpacing the latter. The one-month Hibor at 4.59% on Monday was about 23 basis points above a comparable measure of US dollar borrowing costs, marking the widest gap in a year, according to Bloomberg’s calculations.
On Tuesday, overnight Hibor slid to 5.65% and the one-month rate was little changed at 4.58%.
(Updates with rates, prices on Tuesday)
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