Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA) Overview

 
SAMA, Monetary Policy and
Interest Rates
 
 
Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency
(SAMA)
 
Central bank of Saudi Arabia
Was established in 1952
 
Functions
 
To deal with the banking affairs of the
government
Minting and printing the national currency,
strengthening the Saudi currency and
stabilizing its external and internal value, in
addition to strengthening the currency’s cover
Managing the Kingdom’s foreign exchange
reserves
 
Functions
 
Managing the monetary policy for maintaining
the stability of prices and exchange rate
Promoting the growth of the financial system
and ensuring its soundness
Supervising commercial banks and exchange
dealers
Supervising cooperative insurance companies
and the self-employment professions relating
to the insurance activity
 
Functions
 
Supervising finance companies
Supervising credit information companies
 
Balance sheet of SAMA
 
Liabilities:
Notes issues
Government deposits
Commercial banks’ deposits
Foreign entities’ riyal deposits
 
Balance sheet of SAMA
 
Assets:
Currency cover (gold)
Cash in vault
Deposits with banks abroad
Investments in foreign securities
 
MONETARY POLICY INSTRUMENTS
 
 
Monetary policy instruments
 
1. Cash reserve ratio
2. Repos and reverse repos
3. Foreign exchange swaps
4. Placement of public funds
 
Monetary policy instruments
 
Applies no direct control particularly with
respect to control of interest rates and foreign
exchange.
SAMA’s charter prohibits the payment and
receipt of interests
SAMA has adopted a regime of free
movement of capital
 
Monetary policy instruments
 
Does not use credit ceilings
But imposes credit concentration ceilings on
certain economic sectors
 
Cash reserve ratio
 
Under Article 7 of the Banking Control Law,
banks are required to maintain a percentage
of their customers’ deposits with SAMA as
prescribed cash reserves.
Designed both as monetary policy and to
ensure that the banks have adequate liquidity
to cover their customers’ deposits.
 
Cash reserve ratio
 
Most powerful instrument of liquidity policy
available to SAMA
However, it has been applied only for
implementing structural changes in bank
liquidity (credit creation control) rather than
for the frequent fine-tuning of short-term
liquidity
 
Statutory liquidity ratio (SLR)
 
Under Article 7 of the Banking Control Law,
banks are required to maintain a minimum
amount of specified liquid assets equal to 20%
of their demand and time liabilities (known as
the statutory liquidity ratio).
 
Statutory liquidity ratio (SLR)
 
As a result of the application of the reserve
ratios, the free liquidity at the disposal of the
banks at any time for lending is the difference
between total deposits and the aggregate of
the sums constituting the cash reserve ratio
and the statutory liquidity ratio.
 
Repo
 
 This arrangement permits a very short-term
injection of reserves and their automatic
withdrawal when the repos mature. The
allocation of repos is linked to banks’ holdings
of eligible securities (government
development bonds, FRNs and Treasury bills).
 
Reverse repo
 
In situations where there is a temporary need
to absorb, rather than provide, bank reserves,
SAMA engages in overnight reverse repos
(matched sale-purchase operations) with
banks.
 
Open market operations
 
Open market operations are a flexible
instrument of credit control whereby a central
bank, on its own initiative, alters the liquidity
position of banks by dealing directly in the
market instead of using its influence indirectly
by varying the cost of its credit
 
Open market operations
 
Efficacy of open market operations depends
on central bank holdings of securities and the
size and depth of the market.
 
In situations that call for only temporary
additions to bank reserves, SAMA engages in
short-dated repurchase agreements
(predominantly overnight repos) with banks
 
Foreign exchange swaps
 
Serve the purpose of influencing capital flows,
thereby reducing the disruptions to monetary
policy emanating from the foreign exchange
market
 
Placement of public funds
 
As part of its regular money market
operations, SAMA exercises its discretion in
using the government institutions’ funds at its
disposal to place with the banks.
Such placements of public funds are entirely
at SAMA’s discretion and are complementary
to the primary instruments for fine-tuning
day-to-day liquidity (repos and foreign
exchange swaps).
 
Placement of public funds
 
Basically, however, the placement of funds is
to be seen as providing longer-term liquidity
support (gross or rough-tuning).
 
Monetary policy
 
Expansionary:
Open market purchases of securities by SAMA
Reserve requirement ratio decreases
Contractionary:
Open market sale of securities by SAMA
Reserve requirement ratio increases
 
Impact of monetary policy on various
economic variables
 
Dr. Lakshmi Kalyanaraman
 
4-24
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The Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA) serves as the central bank of Saudi Arabia with a focus on managing the country's monetary policy, maintaining price stability, and supervising financial institutions. Established in 1952, SAMA's functions include managing the national currency, foreign exchange reserves, and promoting financial system growth. SAMA's balance sheet highlights its assets like gold reserves and investments in securities. Monetary policy instruments used by SAMA include cash reserve ratios, repos, and foreign exchange swaps. Notably, SAMA does not directly control interest rates but follows a regime of free capital movement.

  • SAMA
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Monetary Policy
  • Central Bank
  • Financial Regulation

Uploaded on Jul 29, 2024 | 0 Views


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  1. SAMA, Monetary Policy and Interest Rates

  2. Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA) Central bank of Saudi Arabia Was established in 1952

  3. Functions To deal with the banking affairs of the government Minting and printing the national currency, strengthening the Saudi currency and stabilizing its external and internal value, in addition to strengthening the currency s cover Managing the Kingdom s foreign exchange reserves

  4. Functions Managing the monetary policy for maintaining the stability of prices and exchange rate Promoting the growth of the financial system and ensuring its soundness Supervising commercial banks and exchange dealers Supervising cooperative insurance companies and the self-employment professions relating to the insurance activity

  5. Functions Supervising finance companies Supervising credit information companies

  6. Balance sheet of SAMA Liabilities: Notes issues Government deposits Commercial banks deposits Foreign entities riyal deposits

  7. Balance sheet of SAMA Assets: Currency cover (gold) Cash in vault Deposits with banks abroad Investments in foreign securities

  8. MONETARY POLICY INSTRUMENTS

  9. Monetary policy instruments 1. Cash reserve ratio 2. Repos and reverse repos 3. Foreign exchange swaps 4. Placement of public funds

  10. Monetary policy instruments Applies no direct control particularly with respect to control of interest rates and foreign exchange. SAMA s charter prohibits the payment and receipt of interests SAMA has adopted a regime of free movement of capital

  11. Monetary policy instruments Does not use credit ceilings But imposes credit concentration ceilings on certain economic sectors

  12. Cash reserve ratio Under Article 7 of the Banking Control Law, banks are required to maintain a percentage of their customers deposits with SAMA as prescribed cash reserves. Designed both as monetary policy and to ensure that the banks have adequate liquidity to cover their customers deposits.

  13. Cash reserve ratio Most powerful instrument of liquidity policy available to SAMA However, it has been applied only for implementing structural changes in bank liquidity (credit creation control) rather than for the frequent fine-tuning of short-term liquidity

  14. Statutory liquidity ratio (SLR) Under Article 7 of the Banking Control Law, banks are required to maintain a minimum amount of specified liquid assets equal to 20% of their demand and time liabilities (known as the statutory liquidity ratio).

  15. Statutory liquidity ratio (SLR) As a result of the application of the reserve ratios, the free liquidity at the disposal of the banks at any time for lending is the difference between total deposits and the aggregate of the sums constituting the cash reserve ratio and the statutory liquidity ratio.

  16. Repo This arrangement permits a very short-term injection of reserves and their automatic withdrawal when the repos mature. The allocation of repos is linked to banks holdings of eligible securities (government development bonds, FRNs and Treasury bills).

  17. Reverse repo In situations where there is a temporary need to absorb, rather than provide, bank reserves, SAMA engages in overnight reverse repos (matched sale-purchase operations) with banks.

  18. Open market operations Open instrument of credit control whereby a central bank, on its own initiative, alters the liquidity position of banks by dealing directly in the market instead of using its influence indirectly by varying the cost of its credit market operations are a flexible

  19. Open market operations Efficacy of open market operations depends on central bank holdings of securities and the size and depth of the market. In situations that call for only temporary additions to bank reserves, SAMA engages in short-dated repurchase (predominantly overnight repos) with banks agreements

  20. Foreign exchange swaps Serve the purpose of influencing capital flows, thereby reducing the disruptions to monetary policy emanating from the foreign exchange market

  21. Placement of public funds As part of its regular money market operations, SAMA exercises its discretion in using the government institutions funds at its disposal to place with the banks. Such placements of public funds are entirely at SAMA s discretion and are complementary to the primary instruments for fine-tuning day-to-day liquidity (repos and foreign exchange swaps).

  22. Placement of public funds Basically, however, the placement of funds is to be seen as providing longer-term liquidity support (gross or rough-tuning).

  23. Monetary policy Expansionary: Open market purchases of securities by SAMA Reserve requirement ratio decreases Contractionary: Open market sale of securities by SAMA Reserve requirement ratio increases

  24. Impact of monetary policy on various economic variables Expansionary activities Contractionary activities Reserves increase Decrease Credit availability increase Decrease Money supply Increase Decrease Interest rates Decrease Increase Security prices increase decrease Dr. Lakshmi Kalyanaraman 4-24

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