At the trading system of the Shanghai-based
China Foreign Exchange Swap Center on Wednesday morning,
the Bank of China and Fujian Industrial Bank finished the
Center's first trading between the greenback and the HK
currency at 7.7993 HK dollar against one US dollar, with
a turnover of one million US dollars.
The debut of transactions between foreign
currencies on the Chinese mainland is seen by China's financial
circle as a landmark in the sector's internationalization
drive. It is also hailed by the business media as a step
forward in the nation's experiment with full convertibility
of Renminbi (RMB), the Chinese currency.
In the past, Chinese banking institutions were only allowed
to deal in trades between RMB and foreign currencies. Worse,
they were unable to buy and sell foreign currencies directly
on international money markets with foreign exchange (forex)
they held, due largely to their low credit ratings and high
risks of exposure.
The newly acquired access to two-way trade
among foreign currencies implies that China's inter-bank
market is evolving into a foreign exchange market that could
really transfer and manage risks in exchange rates, according
to financial experts.
Zheng Yang, deputy head of the State Administration
of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) Shanghai branch, said China has
suffered a deficit in trade of financial services for years.
"To trade foreign currencies directly allows international
trade between Chinese and foreign banks to transform into
domestic trade," Zheng Yang acknowledged.
According to Li Yu, vice president of the
China Foreign Exchange Swap Center, the new forex market
will also help experiment with RMB derivatives.
"The step forward in the RMB convertibility
process and the growth of the liberalization and internationalization
of Chinese currency is bound to demand a matching RMB pricing
platform that is closely related to international forex
markets," Li said.
The new trade between foreign currencies
has ushered in international practices, active international
market makers and a pricing system that keeps pace with
the global forex market, he added.
It has attracted seven transnational banks,
including Citi Group and HSBC (Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking
Corp.). They, in partnership with three Chinese banks, have
become the first batch of market makers on China forex swap
market.
"The eight pairs of foreign currencies
in trade on the Chinese mainland boast good liquidity. This
will help China's inter-bank forex market to build up a
trustworthy image on world markets," said Rod Jones,
executive managing director of the International Capital
Markets under the Bank of Montreal from Canada.
Jay Lim, vice president of eCommerce Asia
Pacific Global Markets under ABN AMRO from the Netherlands,
said the new forex trading mode "is writing the history
of China's financial market."
Source: Xinhua