YANGON: Myanmar has introduced interbank currency trading, a senior
central bank official said, the latest reform to the financial sector,
which follows the managed float of the kyat currency from April 2012.
Foreign banks are not allowed to operate in Myanmar and the local
banking system is rudimentary, so the interbank market is likely to be
tiny initially.
“We have allowed local private banks to trade in
foreign currency among themselves effective Monday, taking a major step
forward in financial reforms,” the central bank official told Reuters.
“They now can compete on equal terms with each other with compete
transparency,” he added, asking for anonymity since he was speaking to
the media without authorisation.
Than Lwin,
vice-chairman of KBZ Bank, the biggest private lender in the country,
and a retired vice-governor of the central bank, said: “We do welcome
their allowing interbank marketing. It’s a big step towards the
emergence of a foreign exchange market.”
President Thein Sein
took office in March 2011 and, at the head of a quasi-civilian
government, has opened up Myanmar with a series of political and
economic reforms, after half a century of military rule.
Under International Monetary Fund
(IMF) supervision, the authorities started unifying the various
exchange rates at the time of the introduction of the managed float in
2012, and the central bank started selling foreign currency to private
banks through auctions.
In an annual report on Myanmar’s economy
published late on Friday, the IMF said that as of May the currency had
fallen about 13.5% since the float, which had taken it closer to its
long-run fundamental value.
Last year it said the kyat was as much as 40% overvalued.
The central bank sets a benchmark rate against the US dollar each day.
source: The Star
http://www.thestar.com.my/Business/Business-News/2013/08/06/Myanmar-allows-forex-trade-between-local-banks.aspx
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