The US sub-prime experience exemplifies the need for the Hong Kong Mortgage Corporation to sustain its clear missions of maintaining financial stability, and providing liquidity to the banking system and a contingency backstop, Monetary Authority Chief Executive Joseph Yam wrote on Wednesday.
Mr Yam made the point in his weekly Viewpoint column published on the
authority's website.
Yam explained that the Corporation's role, operations and governance are very different
to the federal mortgage corporations in the US, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
The Corporation's primary mission is to promote financial stability by providing
a channel to help banks address their liquidity needs, and the credit risk arising
from their mortgage portfolios, but Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac promote home ownership through participation
in the mortgage market as mortgage lenders.
Mr Yam went on to explain that while the two US bodies originate mortgages in competition with banks, the
Mortgage Corporation does not directly originate mortgages, but buys them under
"prudent criteria" from banks that want to obtain liquidity or reduce the concentration
of their exposure to mortgages.
Being a public-sector organisation while operating on a commercial basis,
the Corporation is not under the same commercial pressures as Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, he further stated, suggesting that its governance arrangements have a strong bias towards financial
stability over profitability.
Given its ownership by the Exchange Fund, the Corporation's board is effectively
its regulator. The chairman, the Financial Secretary, is also the fund's controller
and has the overall responsibility for financial stability in Hong Kong.
"The corporation will continue its business-diversification strategy and
maintain a viable scale of operations to discharge its functions more effectively,"
Mr Yam announced in conclusion.