HKEX's dual-counter model creates investment option for city's trillion-yuan deposits, boosts currency hub status

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When veteran stockbroker Tom Chan Pak-lam first entered the securities industry in 1993, the yuan currency that he carried during his deal-making trips to China was strictly for spending on meals and hotels.

"Thirty years ago, international investors did not care about the yuan shares listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen," said Chan, permanent honourable president of industry body Institute of Securities Dealers, while referring to the indifference towards the undervalued currency which was hard-pegged to the dollar.

But things have changed. The 60-year old Chan says the wave of reforms unleashed by China in the past two decades has increased the demand for its currency, propelling its value. It all began in 2005 when China's exchange rate regime shifted to a managed float under which its moves are driven by a basket of currencies. This drove a rapid appreciation of the currency which now fetches HK$1.12, a vast improvement from the early 90s when the pegged currency could only buy HK$0.94.

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"The yuan has turned from a domestic currency into a more internationally accepted unit, thanks to the Central government's reforms over the past two decades which allowed the use of the yuan to settle trade, make investments and buy insurance products," Chan said.

A view of the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) building in Central on 23 February 2023. Photo: Jonathan Wong alt=A view of the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) building in Central on 23 February 2023. Photo: Jonathan Wong>

The currency may be on the cusp of another transformational phase after the Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing's (HKEX) will launch a facility on June 19 which permits investors to seamlessly interchange between securities listed in both Hong Kong dollar and yuan.

With this facility Hong Kong, which is sitting on a one trillion yuan deposit base, will introduce another investment option for those holding the Chinese currency.

"To boost the issuance and trading of yuan securities in Hong Kong, the HKEX will introduce a dual‑counter market makers (DCMM) regime in the first half of this year to promote the liquidity of yuan‑denominated stocks and price efficiency as well as to tie in with the setting up of yuan trading counters by issuers," Finance Secretary Paul Chan said in his budget speech earlier this year following the passage of a bill by the Legislative Council (Legco)to exempt the stamp duty payable for certain transactions by DCMMs.