Answer2me
7th April 2010, 10:43 AM
A long must read On CB's through the view of a former head of the BIS.
How central banks manage their finances
Speech by Robert D Sleeper, Head of the BIS Banking Department, to the South African Reserve Bank, 18 February 2005. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the BIS.
It is a great pleasure to visit the South African Reserve Bank again and to have the opportunity to speak to you on how central banks manage their financing. As someone who worked in asset/liability management for 17 years in the private sector and more recently at the BIS, this is a subject that has fascinated me for quite some time. For some, the subject is seen as somewhat arcane - not that relevant to the “real†business of central banking, and even less relevant to the outside world. Although I agree that the real business of central banking should not be driven by financial considerations, these considerations can become an important constraint.
At first blush the funding of a central bank as compared to a commercial bank seems relatively easy. On the asset side, central banks are usually heavily restricted in the instruments they can hold. The type and the amount of lending a central bank can do is limited either by its internal statutes or by law or both. In general, one can identify two types of central banks, reflecting two views on what it is proper for the central bank to invest in. Type 1 reflects the idea that central banks should not be involved in commercial lending because of likely conflicts of interest with their policy and regulatory functions and the risk of non-neutrality. If commercial lending is undertaken for policy reasons, it must be undertaken in strictly neutral ways, and collateralised with high-quality paper. Only occasionally would a central bank be asked to do uncollateralised lending and quite often in such cases the central bank will insist on a guarantee from its government. As a result, for Type 1 central banks, most of the assets on the balance sheet are government securities. The remaining items might be gold and foreign exchange reserves, but in some countries these are held by the finance ministry, ie the government, instead.
Type 2 central banks restrict not only the amount and type of commercial lending but also lending to the government. These central banks - the majority - additionally reflect the idea that they should not be a source of financing for the government. As a result, for Type 2 central banks the proportion of government securities on the balance sheet - if any at all - is restricted, and instead the bulk of assets is in the form of foreign exchange reserves and gold. I will discuss the implications of holding gold and foreign exchange reserves a little later on in this speech.
Let us focus for the moment now on Type 1 central banks, ie those central banks whose dominant asset is government securities. It would appear to me, wearing my commercial banker hat, that the financing of a Type 1 central bank is pretty easy - especially when compared with financing a commercial bank, where the assets are much wider in scope and more variable in quality. Not only is the asset structure more straightforward, but mismatches between the maturity characteristics of those assets and the liabilities that fund them is of fundamentally less importance for a central bank than a commercial bank - an issue that I will return to later. Central bank liabilities consist of banknotes and the deposits commercial banks may be required to hold with them. The former is a non-interest bearing liability whose maturity lasts as long as there is a need for banknotes, while the latter (commercial bank deposits) have maturities as long as reserve requirements remain in place and, moreover, are either non-interest bearing or bear rates of interest significantly below market rates.
So looking at things from an asset/liability standpoint, the central bank with zero gold and foreign exchange reserves earns a profit equal to the interest income on the government securities it holds plus whatever interest it earns on collateralised loans made through its discount and Lombard facilities. This appears to be such an easy way to make money that it only becomes politically and socially acceptable as long as the central bank acts as a public institution; ie remits most of its profits to the government, even if it is privately owned, as is the case in South Africa. We need to be very clear on this point, namely that because a central bank’s profits stem essentially from its role as issuer of the currency and maintainer of obligatory reserve requirements, and because such revenues escalate as inflation increases, central banks must be guided by clear policy and not financial objectives. And it is because the financial gains from inflation accrue to the government that central banks are granted the day-to-day independence from government to pursue policy objectives rather than financial ones.
So a central bank with little foreign exchange reserves or gold earns “easy†profits so long as government securities pay interest. In the baseline case, the problems to solve are the ones just mentioned - preventing policy decisions from being diverted by financial considerations, and preventing easy income from engendering slack attitudes on the part of central bankers towards the use of public money. What departures from this baseline should we be concerned about? Before we get to foreign exchange reserves and gold, there are several domestic concerns that should be mentioned.
First, the presumption that central bank claims on government bear interest is not trivial. In several countries fiscal dominance has at times included the obligation of the central bank to finance government at such low interest rates that profitability has been compromised. For this reason loans to government should typically be in the form of marketable securities bearing market rates of interest. This should include interest stemming from claims arising from losses on foreign exchange market intervention. As I understand it, the claim that the South African Reserve Bank had on the government was not interest bearing, but the claim is being paid off without so far compromising the financial position of the Bank.
My second point is about profitability. Normally, monetary policy operations should be profitable. Whether implementing monetary policy through open market operations or standing facilities, the central bank purchases or borrows securities (repos), ie lends money, when money market interest rates are high and it wants to add liquidity to bring them down. Conversely, it sells or lends securities, ie borrows money, when money market interest rates are low and it wants to withdraw liquidity in order to raise rates. These activities are obviously profitable for the central bank. Furthermore, in a growing economy the central bank’s balance sheet must grow, because it is at the base of the credit structure and money supply. Therefore, over the course of a year the central bank must buy more securities than it sells, thereby expanding its balance sheet. Since the extra assets it acquires are financed by an increase in commercial bank deposits, central bank profits will rise as the money supply grows.
There can, however, be limits to the volume of market operations that a central bank can engage in before distortions arise in markets. On occasion, central banks can find themselves being forced to conduct such large volumes of market operations that collateral availability and other considerations force them to provide liquidity at progressively lower rates. Examples include the mountain of commercial and trade bills that ended up on the central bank’s balance sheet following attempts to control credit creation by government overfunding in the United Kingdom in the 1980s, and the persistent government overfunding in New Zealand in recent years. In both cases this excessive government bond issuance required the central bank to make up large and persistent liquidity shortfalls on a daily basis in an environment where collateral acceptable to the central bank became scarce.
South Africa faced a similar problem not so long ago in the context of operations to stabilise domestic liquidity in the face of large-scale foreign currency intervention. The consequence of these activities is that the central bank is forced to carry progressively lower-yielding assets or raise funds at progressively higher costs, thereby reducing its profitability for the duration of these operations. This may last for a considerable period of time.
A third potential concern is associated with the low level of inflation that central banks have managed to achieve. Consistently low inflation leads to lower interest rates and a lower positive interest spread between the central bank’s assets and liabilities. Indeed, in a deflation environment with rates at zero there is no spread left at all. Moreover, in such circumstances monetary policy operations can involve central banks taking on large volumes of high-priced assets with significant revaluation risk attached. Some central banks have found themselves in this position in recent years - most notably the Bank of Japan, which has accumulated large amounts of Japanese government bonds at very low yields.
Finally, in recent years a new concern over the outlook for central bank profitability has emerged. This is the growth in credit and debit cards and the potential growth in e-money, which collectively reduce the need for people to hold currency. Looking ahead I suppose we could envisage the day when we reach the cashless society. When this happens, central banks will lose an important source of income. This can of course be compensated for by the receiving of non-interest bearing demand deposits from mandatory reserve requirements, but these are also declining as the authorities rely less on lower reserve requirements to manage monetary conditions and payment systems. This decline in the profitability of central banks might lead some to consider charging directly for the services they provide, such as providing intraday overdrafts as a means of keeping the payment system functioning. But there are clearly limits to how far this can go before legitimate cost recovery becomes a disguised tax mechanism.
Despite these concerns, maintaining the profitability of a central bank which is focused purely on domestic monetary policy is still relatively easy compared to one which also has to worry about its exchange rate. Let us consider a situation where the central bank carries not just government bonds and a few domestic loans on its balance sheet but in addition gold and foreign exchange reserves. Traditionally gold was a zero interest asset and, although it is true that nowadays some central banks can and do lend their gold, the facts are that (a) the return is very low and (b) many central banks are unwilling to take the risk and do not lend their gold at all. So holding gold drags down the spread between return on assets and cost of liabilities and, from a net interest income standpoint, reduces central bank profitability. However, from a portfolio diversification standpoint, holding gold has proven to be an excellent investment. We at the BIS hold a considerable amount of gold and in recent years have benefited considerably on a valuation basis from the rise in the price of gold.
I shall discuss the issue of whether or not central banks should mark their reserves to market a little later on.
But now let us turn to foreign exchange reserves, which for the most part I have left out of the picture thus far. This is where the problem can become more serious. The critical issues in determining the profitability of holding foreign exchange reserves are (1) the relationship between domestic interest rates and the interest rates on the foreign exchange reserves and (2) the impact of the evolution of the exchange rate on the domestic currency value of the reserves.
Looking at the interest rate spread question first, if domestic rates are high and the rates on the reserves are low, potentially the central bank has a problem. For example, when the South African Reserve Bank buys dollars and sells rand, to avoid causing inflation, large-sized purchases of foreign exchange must be financed not by balance sheet expansion, but by asset substitution. The Reserve Bank must sell or lend some of its domestic securities (higher-yielding securities) to make room for the lower-yielding dollar securities. By doing so, the Reserve Bank drains the liquidity generated by its intervention, ie sterilises the impact of its intervention. But it also reduces its profitability, because it substitutes lower-yielding assets for high-yielding assets. Another alternative for sterilising intervention, as you have discovered, is for the central bank to fund itself like a commercial bank, ie by issuing short-term liability instruments at market rates of interest to finance its dollar investments. At times when collateral becomes scarce, this can become a cheaper source of funding for the central bank, but it still does not compensate for the interest differential between rand and dollars. In this situation the central bank faces a negative spread: borrowing in domestic currency at a higher rate than the return on its foreign currency investments. This produces a running loss.
However, for countries with very low interest rates, perhaps associated with deflation pressures, sterilisation of dollar intervention can yield a running profit. In fact, sterilised intervention for such countries is equivalent to what is commonly called a carry trade in the foreign exchange market, ie borrowing a low interest rate currency, such as the Japanese yen, to fund the acquisition of a high interest rate currency.
Let us return now to the issue of marking to market. The running loss or profit is not the end of the story. Whenever the exchange rate changes, so does the market value of the reserves in terms of the value of the liabilities used to fund those reserves. Traditionally central banks have not marked their reserves to market, thereby not making obvious these changes in market value. There is a school of thought that would argue that, because central banks are required to act in the public interest and not seek to maximise profits, they should not be required to mark to market. The problem with this argument is that, in seeking to act in the public interest, central banks can end up in situations where they lose a lot of money. Whether one likes it or not, foreign exchange intervention is risky. Whenever you sell the rand and buy the dollar - unless you have a need for dollars to buy something - you are taking a risk. This holds whether you are in the private sector or whether you are a central bank. If a central bank intervenes heavily to keep its currency down, it builds up a big foreign exchange position. And if its currency ultimately goes up anyway, not only might it have a negative carry on its foreign exchange reserves, it will also have a revaluation loss.
How central banks manage their finances
Speech by Robert D Sleeper, Head of the BIS Banking Department, to the South African Reserve Bank, 18 February 2005. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the BIS.
It is a great pleasure to visit the South African Reserve Bank again and to have the opportunity to speak to you on how central banks manage their financing. As someone who worked in asset/liability management for 17 years in the private sector and more recently at the BIS, this is a subject that has fascinated me for quite some time. For some, the subject is seen as somewhat arcane - not that relevant to the “real†business of central banking, and even less relevant to the outside world. Although I agree that the real business of central banking should not be driven by financial considerations, these considerations can become an important constraint.
At first blush the funding of a central bank as compared to a commercial bank seems relatively easy. On the asset side, central banks are usually heavily restricted in the instruments they can hold. The type and the amount of lending a central bank can do is limited either by its internal statutes or by law or both. In general, one can identify two types of central banks, reflecting two views on what it is proper for the central bank to invest in. Type 1 reflects the idea that central banks should not be involved in commercial lending because of likely conflicts of interest with their policy and regulatory functions and the risk of non-neutrality. If commercial lending is undertaken for policy reasons, it must be undertaken in strictly neutral ways, and collateralised with high-quality paper. Only occasionally would a central bank be asked to do uncollateralised lending and quite often in such cases the central bank will insist on a guarantee from its government. As a result, for Type 1 central banks, most of the assets on the balance sheet are government securities. The remaining items might be gold and foreign exchange reserves, but in some countries these are held by the finance ministry, ie the government, instead.
Type 2 central banks restrict not only the amount and type of commercial lending but also lending to the government. These central banks - the majority - additionally reflect the idea that they should not be a source of financing for the government. As a result, for Type 2 central banks the proportion of government securities on the balance sheet - if any at all - is restricted, and instead the bulk of assets is in the form of foreign exchange reserves and gold. I will discuss the implications of holding gold and foreign exchange reserves a little later on in this speech.
Let us focus for the moment now on Type 1 central banks, ie those central banks whose dominant asset is government securities. It would appear to me, wearing my commercial banker hat, that the financing of a Type 1 central bank is pretty easy - especially when compared with financing a commercial bank, where the assets are much wider in scope and more variable in quality. Not only is the asset structure more straightforward, but mismatches between the maturity characteristics of those assets and the liabilities that fund them is of fundamentally less importance for a central bank than a commercial bank - an issue that I will return to later. Central bank liabilities consist of banknotes and the deposits commercial banks may be required to hold with them. The former is a non-interest bearing liability whose maturity lasts as long as there is a need for banknotes, while the latter (commercial bank deposits) have maturities as long as reserve requirements remain in place and, moreover, are either non-interest bearing or bear rates of interest significantly below market rates.
So looking at things from an asset/liability standpoint, the central bank with zero gold and foreign exchange reserves earns a profit equal to the interest income on the government securities it holds plus whatever interest it earns on collateralised loans made through its discount and Lombard facilities. This appears to be such an easy way to make money that it only becomes politically and socially acceptable as long as the central bank acts as a public institution; ie remits most of its profits to the government, even if it is privately owned, as is the case in South Africa. We need to be very clear on this point, namely that because a central bank’s profits stem essentially from its role as issuer of the currency and maintainer of obligatory reserve requirements, and because such revenues escalate as inflation increases, central banks must be guided by clear policy and not financial objectives. And it is because the financial gains from inflation accrue to the government that central banks are granted the day-to-day independence from government to pursue policy objectives rather than financial ones.
So a central bank with little foreign exchange reserves or gold earns “easy†profits so long as government securities pay interest. In the baseline case, the problems to solve are the ones just mentioned - preventing policy decisions from being diverted by financial considerations, and preventing easy income from engendering slack attitudes on the part of central bankers towards the use of public money. What departures from this baseline should we be concerned about? Before we get to foreign exchange reserves and gold, there are several domestic concerns that should be mentioned.
First, the presumption that central bank claims on government bear interest is not trivial. In several countries fiscal dominance has at times included the obligation of the central bank to finance government at such low interest rates that profitability has been compromised. For this reason loans to government should typically be in the form of marketable securities bearing market rates of interest. This should include interest stemming from claims arising from losses on foreign exchange market intervention. As I understand it, the claim that the South African Reserve Bank had on the government was not interest bearing, but the claim is being paid off without so far compromising the financial position of the Bank.
My second point is about profitability. Normally, monetary policy operations should be profitable. Whether implementing monetary policy through open market operations or standing facilities, the central bank purchases or borrows securities (repos), ie lends money, when money market interest rates are high and it wants to add liquidity to bring them down. Conversely, it sells or lends securities, ie borrows money, when money market interest rates are low and it wants to withdraw liquidity in order to raise rates. These activities are obviously profitable for the central bank. Furthermore, in a growing economy the central bank’s balance sheet must grow, because it is at the base of the credit structure and money supply. Therefore, over the course of a year the central bank must buy more securities than it sells, thereby expanding its balance sheet. Since the extra assets it acquires are financed by an increase in commercial bank deposits, central bank profits will rise as the money supply grows.
There can, however, be limits to the volume of market operations that a central bank can engage in before distortions arise in markets. On occasion, central banks can find themselves being forced to conduct such large volumes of market operations that collateral availability and other considerations force them to provide liquidity at progressively lower rates. Examples include the mountain of commercial and trade bills that ended up on the central bank’s balance sheet following attempts to control credit creation by government overfunding in the United Kingdom in the 1980s, and the persistent government overfunding in New Zealand in recent years. In both cases this excessive government bond issuance required the central bank to make up large and persistent liquidity shortfalls on a daily basis in an environment where collateral acceptable to the central bank became scarce.
South Africa faced a similar problem not so long ago in the context of operations to stabilise domestic liquidity in the face of large-scale foreign currency intervention. The consequence of these activities is that the central bank is forced to carry progressively lower-yielding assets or raise funds at progressively higher costs, thereby reducing its profitability for the duration of these operations. This may last for a considerable period of time.
A third potential concern is associated with the low level of inflation that central banks have managed to achieve. Consistently low inflation leads to lower interest rates and a lower positive interest spread between the central bank’s assets and liabilities. Indeed, in a deflation environment with rates at zero there is no spread left at all. Moreover, in such circumstances monetary policy operations can involve central banks taking on large volumes of high-priced assets with significant revaluation risk attached. Some central banks have found themselves in this position in recent years - most notably the Bank of Japan, which has accumulated large amounts of Japanese government bonds at very low yields.
Finally, in recent years a new concern over the outlook for central bank profitability has emerged. This is the growth in credit and debit cards and the potential growth in e-money, which collectively reduce the need for people to hold currency. Looking ahead I suppose we could envisage the day when we reach the cashless society. When this happens, central banks will lose an important source of income. This can of course be compensated for by the receiving of non-interest bearing demand deposits from mandatory reserve requirements, but these are also declining as the authorities rely less on lower reserve requirements to manage monetary conditions and payment systems. This decline in the profitability of central banks might lead some to consider charging directly for the services they provide, such as providing intraday overdrafts as a means of keeping the payment system functioning. But there are clearly limits to how far this can go before legitimate cost recovery becomes a disguised tax mechanism.
Despite these concerns, maintaining the profitability of a central bank which is focused purely on domestic monetary policy is still relatively easy compared to one which also has to worry about its exchange rate. Let us consider a situation where the central bank carries not just government bonds and a few domestic loans on its balance sheet but in addition gold and foreign exchange reserves. Traditionally gold was a zero interest asset and, although it is true that nowadays some central banks can and do lend their gold, the facts are that (a) the return is very low and (b) many central banks are unwilling to take the risk and do not lend their gold at all. So holding gold drags down the spread between return on assets and cost of liabilities and, from a net interest income standpoint, reduces central bank profitability. However, from a portfolio diversification standpoint, holding gold has proven to be an excellent investment. We at the BIS hold a considerable amount of gold and in recent years have benefited considerably on a valuation basis from the rise in the price of gold.
I shall discuss the issue of whether or not central banks should mark their reserves to market a little later on.
But now let us turn to foreign exchange reserves, which for the most part I have left out of the picture thus far. This is where the problem can become more serious. The critical issues in determining the profitability of holding foreign exchange reserves are (1) the relationship between domestic interest rates and the interest rates on the foreign exchange reserves and (2) the impact of the evolution of the exchange rate on the domestic currency value of the reserves.
Looking at the interest rate spread question first, if domestic rates are high and the rates on the reserves are low, potentially the central bank has a problem. For example, when the South African Reserve Bank buys dollars and sells rand, to avoid causing inflation, large-sized purchases of foreign exchange must be financed not by balance sheet expansion, but by asset substitution. The Reserve Bank must sell or lend some of its domestic securities (higher-yielding securities) to make room for the lower-yielding dollar securities. By doing so, the Reserve Bank drains the liquidity generated by its intervention, ie sterilises the impact of its intervention. But it also reduces its profitability, because it substitutes lower-yielding assets for high-yielding assets. Another alternative for sterilising intervention, as you have discovered, is for the central bank to fund itself like a commercial bank, ie by issuing short-term liability instruments at market rates of interest to finance its dollar investments. At times when collateral becomes scarce, this can become a cheaper source of funding for the central bank, but it still does not compensate for the interest differential between rand and dollars. In this situation the central bank faces a negative spread: borrowing in domestic currency at a higher rate than the return on its foreign currency investments. This produces a running loss.
However, for countries with very low interest rates, perhaps associated with deflation pressures, sterilisation of dollar intervention can yield a running profit. In fact, sterilised intervention for such countries is equivalent to what is commonly called a carry trade in the foreign exchange market, ie borrowing a low interest rate currency, such as the Japanese yen, to fund the acquisition of a high interest rate currency.
Let us return now to the issue of marking to market. The running loss or profit is not the end of the story. Whenever the exchange rate changes, so does the market value of the reserves in terms of the value of the liabilities used to fund those reserves. Traditionally central banks have not marked their reserves to market, thereby not making obvious these changes in market value. There is a school of thought that would argue that, because central banks are required to act in the public interest and not seek to maximise profits, they should not be required to mark to market. The problem with this argument is that, in seeking to act in the public interest, central banks can end up in situations where they lose a lot of money. Whether one likes it or not, foreign exchange intervention is risky. Whenever you sell the rand and buy the dollar - unless you have a need for dollars to buy something - you are taking a risk. This holds whether you are in the private sector or whether you are a central bank. If a central bank intervenes heavily to keep its currency down, it builds up a big foreign exchange position. And if its currency ultimately goes up anyway, not only might it have a negative carry on its foreign exchange reserves, it will also have a revaluation loss.