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IMF POLICY PAPER

REVIEW OF THE METHOD OF VALUATION OF THE SDR

NOVEMBER 2015

IMF staff regularly produces papers proposing new IMF policies, exploring options for reform, or reviewing existing IMF policies and operations. The following documents have been released and are included in this package:

  • The Staff Report prepared by IMF staff and completed on November 13, 2015 for the Executive Board’s consideration on November 30, 2015.

  • Two Staff Supplements titled Review of the Method of Valuation of the SDR— Weighting Formula and SDR Interest Rate and Review of the Method of Valuation of the SDR—Revised Proposed Decision and Illustrative Currency Amounts.,

The following documents have been or will be separately released:

  • A Press Release summarizing the views of the Executive Board as expressed during its November 30, 2015 consideration of the staff report.

The Executive Board, in its formal meeting on the review on November 30, 2015, adopted the revised proposed decisions contained in the supplement Review of the Method of Valuation of the SDR—Revised Proposed Decision and Illustrative Currency Amounts. These decisions will govern the weights of currencies in the SDR currency basket effective October 1, 2016.

The IMF’s transparency policy allows for the deletion of market-sensitive information and premature disclosure of the authorities’ policy intentions in published staff reports and other documents.

Electronic copies of IMF Policy Papers are available to the public from http://www.imf.org/external/pp/ppindex.aspx

International Monetary Fund

Washington, D.C.

© 20[xx] International Monetary Fund

Front Matter Page

REVIEW OF THE METHOD OF VALUATION OF THE SDR

November 13, 2015

Executive Summary

This paper provides the basis for the quinquennial review of the method of valuation of the Special Drawing Right (SDR). The review considers the composition, size, and weighting of the SDR currency basket and the financial instruments used to determine the SDR interest rate.

The analysis in this paper is guided by the informal discussion of Executive Directors in July on initial considerations for the review. In light of Directors’ preference, the two currency selection criteria for SDR inclusion are maintained. Since China continues to meet the export criterion, a key focus of this paper is on assessing whether the renminbi (RMB) could be determined to be a freely usable currency, which is the second criterion.

The paper documents the rising international use and trading of the RMB since the 2010 SDR valuation review. A range of indicators suggests that use of the RMB in international transactions has risen substantially, albeit from a low base. The paper also finds that the RMB has become far more actively traded in foreign exchange markets, with sufficient depth to support operations of the size Fund members might undertake without an appreciable change in the exchange rate.

The Chinese authorities have taken a broad set of measures to further facilitate RMB operations by the Fund and the membership, covering all areas identified by staff in July. These steps include the liberalization of access to the onshore fixed-income and foreign exchange markets for Fund members and agents acting on their behalf. Recent volatility in onshore and offshore markets has highlighted some operational challenges, but the resulting impact on members is mitigated by their ability to use whichever of these markets is most advantageous.

Staff proposes that the Executive Board determine the RMB to be a freely usable currency, and include it in the SDR basket. While the legal framework sets forth the criteria that must be satisfied for a currency to be determined freely usable, the application of these criteria in assessing specific currencies ultimately requires the exercise of policy judgment. In the judgment of staff, the RMB can be considered to be both widely used and widely traded within the meaning of the definition of a freely usable currency set forth in the Articles of Agreement. RMB markets are also sufficiently developed to provide market-determined exchange rates, a benchmark interest rate, and hedging instruments that meet the operational needs of the Fund, members, and other SDR users. While recognizing some operational challenges, staff is satisfied that these are manageable.

Staff proposes to expand the SDR basket to five currencies. Keeping the current four currencies (British pound, euro, Japanese yen, and U.S. dollar) and adding the RMB would preserve stability in the composition of the basket while increasing its representativeness of the currencies used in the global trade and financial system. The added complexity of moving to a five-currency basket is expected to be limited and manageable for the Fund, members, and other SDR users.

For the purpose of assessing the export selection criterion and currency weighting, staff proposes to extend to all currencies the currency-based approach applied to monetary unions. This proposal recognizes, given the purpose of the SDR (which is not synonymous with the purpose of the “freely usable currency” concept), that the economic variables used for currency selection (other than the freely usable criterion) and currency weighting should reflect the characteristics of currencies rather than members.

Staff also proposes to adjust the formula for determining the weights of the SDR basket currencies. The proposed weighting formula would address long-recognized shortcomings of the current formula, providing equal weights for trade and financial indicators, with the latter incorporating a broader range of financial variables.

Staff proposes to include the three-month benchmark yield for China Treasury bonds as the RMB-denominated interest rate instrument in the SDR interest rate basket. For the other currencies comprising the SDR basket, the instruments used to determine the SDR interest rate would continue to be based on the yields on three-month government securities.

Staff proposes October 1, 2016 for the effectiveness of the new SDR basket and the RMB as a freely usable currency. In August 2015, the Board already approved an extension of the current SDR basket through September 30, 2016. Setting a future date for the effectiveness of the freely usable decision will help provide sufficient lead time for the Fund, members, and other SDR users to adjust to these changes.

Finally, staff proposes that the SDR basket be established for five years, consistent with past practice. Accordingly, and following the Executive Board’s earlier extension of the current SDR basket through September 2016, the next review of the method of valuation of the SDR would take place by September 30, 2021, unless developments in the interim justify an earlier review.

Approved By

Sean Hagan, Siddharth Tiwari, and Andrew Tweedie

Prepared by an interdepartmental staff team led by the Finance; Legal; and Strategy, Policy, and Review Departments; with contributions from the Asia and Pacific, Communications, Monetary and Capital Markets, Secretary’s, and Statistics Departments.

Contents

  • I. INTRODUCTION

  • II. INDICATORS FOR CURRENCY SELECTION CRITERIA

  • A. Export criterion

  • B. Freely usable criterion

  • III. OPERATIONAL ISSUES

  • A. Recent reforms to improve market access and data transparency

  • B. Exchange rate issues

  • C. Reference interest rate for SDR basket

  • IV. ASSESSMENT OF THE RMB

  • V. SIZE OF THE SDR BASKET

  • VI. WEIGHTING FORMULA

  • A. Background

  • B. Proposed weighting formula

  • VII. REVIEW OF SDR INTEREST RATE BASKET

  • A. Review of current SDR interest rate instruments

  • B. Possible RMB-denominated instrument for the SDR interest rate basket

  • C. Impact of potential RMB inclusion

  • D. Future work

  • VIII. TRANSITION ISSUES

  • A. Effectiveness of the freely usable determination

  • B. Currency amounts

  • IX. PROPOSED DECISIONS

  • BOXES

  • 1. Currency Selection Criteria for the SDR Basket

  • 2. SDR Valuation Framework: Currency and Member-Based Approaches

  • 3. Recent Reforms to Capital Controls and Domestic Financial Markets in China

  • 4. Exchange Rate Management in China: Volatility and Intervention

  • 5. A Representative RMB Instrument for the 3-Month Interest Rate

  • 6. Alternative Weighting Formula: History of Board Discussions

  • FIGURES

  • 1. Exports of Goods and Services

  • 2. Official Reserves

  • 3. International Banking Liabilities

  • 4. International Debt Securities Outstanding

  • 5. International Payments

  • 6. Trade Finance (Letters of Credit)

  • 7. Daily Trading Volumes

  • 8. Renminbi Spot Onshore (CNY) and Offshore (CNH) Exchange Rates

  • 9. Onshore Interest Rates in China

  • 10. Alternative SDR Valuations—Difference from Actual SDR

  • 11. SDR Interest Rate and Components

  • 12. SDR Interest Rate

  • 13. SDR Interest Rate Implied by Forward Rates

  • TABLES

  • 1. Exports of Goods and Services

  • 2. Official Reserves

  • 3. Official Foreign Currency Assets

  • 4. International Banking Liabilities

  • 5. International Debt Securities Outstanding

  • 6. Issuance of International Debt Securities

  • 7. Cross-Border Payments

  • 8. Trade Finance (Letters of Credit)

  • 9. Currency Composition of Global Foreign Exchange Market Turnover

  • 10. RMB Daily Average Turnover in Regional Trading Centers, April 2015

  • 11. Weights of Exports and Reserve Holdings in Past SDR Reviews

  • 12. Nominal Values of Global Trade and Financial Indicators

  • 13. Currency Weights Based on Current Formula

  • 14. Alternative Weighting Formula—50% Exports + 50% Composite Financial Indicator

  • 15. Currency Weights Under Proposed Approach

  • 16. Illustrative Currency Amounts

  • ANNEXES

  • I. Data Issues

  • II. High-Frequency Currency Trading Data: An Analysis of Trading Volumes, Liquidity, and Market Resilience

  • III. Key Decisions on SDR Valuation and the SDR Interest Rate

  • IV. CCDC Yield Curve Methodology for China Treasury Bonds

Front Matter Page

REVIEW OF THE METHOD OF VALUATION OF THE SDR— WEIGHTING FORMULA AND SDR INTEREST RATE

November 21, 2015

Executive Summary

This supplement to Review of the Method of Valuation of the SDR (11/13/2015) provides background on the rationale for the weighting formula proposed by staff; an explanation of the effects on currency weights of 1) new data, 2) changing the weighting formula, and 3) inclusion of the renminbi; and more detail on the similarities and differences between the formula proposed by staff and the formula provided in footnote 47 of the Board paper. The supplement also provides historical information on changes in the SDR interest rate following previous reviews of the SDR basket.

The supplement concludes that both weighting variants would address long-standing shortcomings of the current formula and be consistent with the principles guiding the SDR valuation method. The staff’s proposal reflected a preference for the continuity provided with respect to the weight of reserves. However, given the broad similarities between both variants of the formula, and in light of the view expressed by Executive Directors in the informal Board briefing on November 19 that the formula provided in footnote 47 better enhances the attractiveness of the SDR as a reserve asset, staff proposes that the latter be adopted as the new weighting formula. A revised Board decision to this effect will be circulated under separate cover to Executive Directors.

Approved By

Sean Hagan, Siddharth Tiwari, and Andrew Tweedie

Prepared by the Finance; Legal; and Strategy, Policy, and Review Departments.

Contents

  • WEIGHTING FORMULA

  • A. Weights—Background

  • B. Explanation of the Effects on Currency Weights

  • C. Comparison with the Alternative Weighting Formula (2010 B)

  • SDR INTEREST RATE

  • FIGURES

  • 1. Alternative SDR Valuations—Difference from Actual SDR

  • TABLES

  • 1. Currency Weights under Current and Proposed Formulas

  • 2. Exports and Reserves

  • 3. Currency Weights under Proposed and “2010 B” Formulas

  • 4. Change in SDR Interest Rate in Past Reviews

Front Matter Page

REVIEW OF THE METHOD OF VALUATION OF THE SDR— REVISED PROPOSED DECISION AND ILLUSTRATIVE CURRENCY AMOUNTS

November 25, 2015

Executive Summary

This supplement to Review of the Method of Valuation of the SDR (11/13/2015) includes revisions to Decision 2.A that reflect the revised proposal for the currency weighting formula presented as “2010 B” in Review of the Method of Valuation of the SDR, Supplement 1 (11/21/15), corresponding currency weights and illustrative currency amounts based on July 1–September 30, 2015 average exchange rates. It also includes a revision to paragraph 1 of Decision 2.A to clarify that the availability of data on financial variables is not a precondition for assessing the export criterion.

Approved By

Sean Hagan, Siddharth Tiwari, and Andrew Tweedie

Prepared by the Finance; Legal; and Strategy, Policy, and Review Departments.

Contents

  • REVISIONS TO A PROPOSED DECISION

  • ILLUSTRATIVE CURRENCY AMOUNTS BASED ON PROPOSED WEIGHTS

  • TABLE

  • 1. Illustrative Currency Amounts Based on Proposed Weights

  • APPENDIX

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