Hong Kong's de facto central bank is developing a short-term liquidity tool for offshore yuan as demand for the Chinese currency surges among global investors.
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority is researching a 7-day offshore yuan liquidity tender mechanism, adding a new tool to manage short-term funding volatility as global investors scale up renminbi operations through the city. Yu Weiman, the HKMA's chief executive, announced the initiative on Tuesday, part of a broader push to deepen the offshore yuan market infrastructure.
"Providing a short-dated liquidity instrument can help reduce funding cost volatility for banks managing offshore yuan positions," Yu said. The mechanism would give financial institutions a predictable weekly funding window, complementing existing overnight facilities and the standing swap line between the HKMA and the People's Bank of China.
The proposed 7-day tender targets a gap in the current toolkit. Offshore yuan funding costs, measured by the CNH HIBOR, have shown greater intra-month volatility than onshore rates, with the 1-week CNH HIBOR occasionally spiking more than 100 basis points above its onshore equivalent during quarter-end periods. A regular 7-day auction could smooth those dislocations by providing a standing source of mid-term yuan liquidity.
The initiative shows Hong Kong's race to maintain its lead as the world's largest offshore yuan hub, where roughly 75 percent of all offshore yuan payments are processed. It comes as a HSBC survey of more than 120 institutional investors across 12 Asia-Pacific markets — managing a combined US$32 trillion in assets — found 75 percent expect to increase yuan allocations over the next one to two years. Two-thirds cited portfolio diversification as their primary motive, while 54 percent pointed to China's global trade footprint.
Offshore Yuan Demand Shifts From Access to Scale
The survey reflects a structural shift in yuan adoption. "What has shifted in recent years is that renminbi market access is no longer about entry; it is about whether investors can operate at scale," Cheuk Wong, head of markets and securities services for Hong Kong at HSBC, said. Some 63 percent of respondents prefer offshore yuan markets for currency transactions, while 54 percent rely on cross-border channels such as Bond Connect and Stock Connect.
The HKMA's proposed tender mechanism would directly address this scaling challenge. Deeper and more predictable offshore liquidity reduces the cost of holding yuan positions, making it easier for asset managers to increase allocations without incurring punitive funding costs. It also narrows the arbitrage gap between onshore and offshore rates, a persistent friction for global investors managing multi-currency portfolios.
Policy Support for Yuan Internationalization Accelerates
The initiative is the latest in a series of measures by Beijing and Hong Kong authorities to internationalize the yuan. The PBoC has expanded cross-border connect schemes, while Hong Kong has launched new products including yuan-denominated gold futures and a gold clearing system. The 7-day tender would add a monetary policy tool analogous to the PBoC's open market operations, giving the HKMA finer control over offshore liquidity conditions.
For global investors, the stakes are clear. If the mechanism succeeds in reducing CNH funding volatility, it could accelerate yuan adoption among sovereign wealth funds and pension funds that have been cautious about adding the currency due to liquidity concerns. The next milestone will be the mechanism's design details, including auction frequency, counterparty eligibility, and whether it operates as a standing facility or a discretionary tool.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.