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Completed Mixed AidData Chinese Aid

TCMB makes RMB 6.98 billion drawdown under currency swap agreement with PBOC in June 2019

¥6.99M RMB

Funder People's Bank of China (PBC)
Recipient Organization Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (TCMB)
Country Turkey
Start Date Jun 01, 2019
End Date Apr 27, 2026
Duration 2,522 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Recipient
Data Source AidData Chinese Aid
Grant ID 95620
Grant Description

TCMB makes RMB 6.98 billion drawdown under currency swap agreement with PBOC in June 2019 On February 21, 2012, the Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (TCMB or CBRT) and the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) signed an RMB 10 billion (TRY 3 billion), bilateral currency swap agreement to facilitate trade and improve foreign currency liquidity in Turkey.

The agreement was extended for an additional three years in November 2015 and the value of the currency swap was increased to RMB 12 billion.

Then, on May 30, 2019, the agreement was extended for an additional three years and the value of the currency swap was increased to RMB 35 billion.

TCMB made (gross) drawdowns under its currency swap agreement with the PBOC equivalent to approximately RMB 990,675,000 (or 450 million Turkish liras or $142,547,235) on November 30, 2016, RMB 6,986,997,198 ($1 billion) in June 2019, and RMB 35 billion ($5,494,160,000) on June 15, 2021. The 2016 borrowing carried an interest rate of SHIBOR plus a 0.5% margin (50 basis points).

The 2019 and 2021 borrowings carried an interest rate of SHIBOR plus a 2% margin (200 basis points). All borrowings carried a 1-year maturity. TCMB’s 2016 drawdown is captured via Record ID#89437. Its 2019 drawdown is captured via Record ID#95620. Its 2021 drawdown is captured via Record ID#89438.

📋 Staff Comments
  1. A bilateral currency swap (BCS) agreement — also known as a central bank liquidity swap agreement — is an agreement between the central banks of two countries to exchange cash flows in different currencies at predetermined rates over a specified period of time. Central banks participate in these agreements to facilitate bilateral trade settlements using their national currencies (rather than relying upon on a third-party currency such as the U.S. dollar), manage demands from their local banks, and provide liquidity support to financial markets. The party that draws down on the swap line becomes the borrower and the other party becomes lender. During the term of the swap, the party that draws down on the swap line makes either fixed or floating interest payments on the principal amount. If both parties draw down on the swap line, then both parties exchange fixed or floating interest payments on the principal amounts. The 5-step process of drawing upon a currency swap line with the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) can described from the perspective of an importer in a given country (‘Country X’) seeking to settle trade with a Chinese firm in RMB. Step 1: The central bank of Country X and the PBOC activate their currency swap in advance, at which point each party deposits a specific amount of its currency in an account controlled by the other party (i.e. the central bank of Country X deposits local currency in an account controlled by the PBOC, and the PBOC deposits an equivalent amount in RMB in an account controlled by the central bank of Country X). Step 2: A firm in Country X that imports goods from China applies for an RMB-denominated loan from a domestic bank. Step 3: The domestic bank in Country X that receives the loan application then applies to its central bank for an RMB-denominated loan. After a review process, the central bank of Country X notifies the domestic bank applicant that its loan application was approved. The central bank of Country X subsequently requests that the PBOC transfer RMB funds from the central bank of Country X’s swap account within the PBOC to the loan applicant’s account with a corresponding bank in China. Step 4: The domestic bank in Country X directs the corresponding bank in China to transfer RMB funds into a Chinese exporter’s account, and the corresponding bank in China provides RMB funds to the Chinese exporter. Step 5: The importer in Country X repays the RMB-denominated loan at its maturity date. The domestic bank notifies the central bank of Country X of the repayment, and transfers RMB into the central bank’s account within the PBOC through the corresponding bank in China. For the central bank of Country X, the RMB deposit is an asset that should be recorded on its balance sheet as an official reserve asset denominated in RMB. The contra entry of this asset is the liability in the local currency of Country X that represents China’s claims in the central bank of Country X. This should be also recorded on the balance sheet of the central bank of Country X. At the time of the exchange of currencies, it should be recorded as an increase in assets and an increase in liabilities of the monetary authorities in the balance of payments. The reason why the PBOC uses this mechanism to provide renminbi liquidity to other central bank is to increase the speed, convenience, and volume of transactions between the two countries. More detailed information about currency swaps with the PBOC can be found at https://www.imf.org/-/media/Files/Publications/WP/2021/English/wpiea2021210-print-pdf.ashx and https://thechinaguys.com/the-rise-of-the-renminbi-the-reality-of-bilateral-swap-agreements/ and https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/bop/2017/pdf/17-25a.pdf.
  2. AidData treats drawdowns under BCS agreements with the PBOC as collateralized loans because, in a BCS arrangement, the currency of the borrower is held as collateral while the lender receives interest on the amount drawn down by the borrower until repayment is made.
  3. For loan and debt rescheduling records with variable interest rates, AidData calculates the all-in interest rate at T0 based on the reference rate (such as LIBOR or EURIBOR) on the loan start date, plus any known margin. Please see the methodology for additional details.
  4. AidData has estimated the RMB value (RMB 6,986,997,198) of the June 2019 drawdown by using the average USD per RMB exchange rate in calendar year 2019 (0.143123).
  5. Turkey publishes monthly data on central bank liabilities (see https://www.dropbox.com/s/t37mkwpce6m8q1o/Copy%20of%20Turkey_CBRT_Swaps_OtherCBs.xlsx?dl=0). It shows an $1.054 billion increase in central bank liabilities in June 2019, which is broadly consistent with other reporting about the magnitude and time of TCMB’s PBOC swap line drawdown in 2019.
  6. Some sources suggest that a fourth drawdown took place in June 2020 (https://www.reuters.com/article/us-turkey-cenbank-china/turkish-central-bank-says-used-chinese-yuan-funding-for-first-time-idUSKBN23Q2AH and https://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1192282.shtml). This issue warrants further investigation.
  7. Most central banks publish their end-of-year outstanding PBOC swap debt, but only a few report detailed transaction-level data on drawdowns during the year. Therefore, if no information on drawings is available, AidData assumes that total drawdowns during the reporting period equal the amount outstanding at the end of the reporting period (and vice versa). Since the (de jure) maturities of PBOC swap drawings are 12 months or less, this creates a lower bound estimate for actual drawdowns under the PBOC swap line.
  8. PBOC swap debt is frequently rolled over. In central bank reports where one can only observe the year-end outstanding amount, no distinction between rollovers and drawdowns is possible. In these cases, one can derive (new) drawdowns as the difference between the current and last year’s outstanding swap debt stock. This measure essentially captures net lending through the PBOC swap line.
📚 Sources & References
  • 2021 RMB Internationalization Report, 2020 RMB Internationalization Report
  • Turkey Seeks FX Swaps With G - 20 States Including U.S.
  • Annual Report 2019
  • Copy of Turkey_CBRT_Swaps_OtherCBs
  • The additional $3.6 bn swap line with China will increase Turkey’s gross FX reserves. It will, however, also increase the CBRT’s FX short positions from $56 bn in early June, of which $21 bn will be the CBRT’s FX liabilities to central banks in China ($6 bn) and Qatar ($15 bn)., 2.2 Para Politikasının Operasyonel Çerçevesi Loan applications and disbursements are still being received and processed as the projects continue to evolve. Ongoing monitoring and evaluation are in place to ensure project continuity.
All Grantees

Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey (TCMB)

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