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Exchange Stabilization Fund

 
Investment Dictionary: Exchange Stabilization Fund - ESF

Money available to the U.S. Treasury Department primarily used for participating in the foreign-exchange market in an attempt to maintain currency stability. It holds U.S. dollars, foreign currencies and special drawing rights.

Investopedia Says:
The ESF allows the U.S. government to intervene in the forex market to influence exchange rates, usually the domain of the central bank, without affecting the domestic money supply. This money is also used to provide financing to foreign countries.

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Banking Dictionary: Exchange Stabilization Fund
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U.S. currency reserve fund employed to stabilize rates in the foreign exchange market. The fund is managed by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, acting in its role as fiscal agent for the Treasury Department. The exchange stabilization fund is also a clearing house for Currency Swaps by the world's central banks and Special Drawing Rights allocated to various countries by the International Monetary Fund.

Wikipedia: Exchange Stabilization Fund
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The Exchange Stabilization Fund (ESF) is an emergency reserve fund of the United States Treasury Department, normally used for foreign exchange intervention. This arrangement (as opposed to having the central bank intervene directly) allows the US government to influence currency exchange rates without affecting domestic money supply.

As of June, 2008, the fund held assets worth $51.2 billion.[1]

Contents

Background

The U.S. Exchange Stabilization Fund was established at the Treasury Department by a provision in the Gold Reserve Act of 31 January 1934. 31 U.S.C. § 5117. It was intended as a response to Britain's Exchange Equalisation Account[2]. The fund began operations in April 1934, financed by $2 billion of the $2.8 billion paper profit the government realized from raising the price of gold to $35 an ounce from $20.67. The Act authorized the ESF to use its capital to deal in gold and foreign exchange in order to stabilize the exchange value of the dollar. The ESF as originally designed was a creature of the Executive Branch not subject to legislative oversight.

The Gold Reserve Act authorized the ESF to use such assets as were not needed for exchange market stabilization to deal in government securities. The Fund had no statutory authority, however, to engage in other activities that it began to undertake. The principal such extraneous activity it devoted itself to was lending dollars to politically favored governments.

In 1938-40, the director of the Division of Monetary Research, Harry Dexter White, worked on a proposal for loans to Latin America and participated in plans for an Inter-American Bank, which did not materialize. The plan for an Inter-American Bank, however, inspired White’s first draft of the subsequent plans for the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank that White prepared in 1941 at Secretary of the U.S. Treasury Henry Morgenthau’s direction.

The Special Drawing Rights Act of 1968, 22 U.S.C. § 286o, likewise provided that any Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) allocated by the International Monetary Fund or otherwise acquired by the United States are resources of the ESF. In accordance with the Act, SDRs can be "monetized" (i.e., converted into dollars) by having the Secretary of the Treasury issue Special Drawing Rights Certificates (SDRCs) to the Federal Reserve System. The amount of SDRCs are limited to the dollar value of the ESF's SDR holdings. The dollar proceeds of such monetizations are assets of the ESF, and the SDRCs are a counterpart liability of the ESF.[3] Treasury has a written understanding with the Fed that the SDRCs will be redeemed when ESF dollar holdings appear to be in excess of foreseeable requirements. Treasury does not pay interest on SDRCs.[4]

Uses

A change in the law, in 1970, allows the Secretary of the Treasury, with the approval of the President, to use money in the ESF to "deal in gold, foreign exchange, and other instruments of credit and securities."[5]

The U.S. government used the fund to provide $20 billion in currency swaps and loan guarantees to Mexico following the 1994 economic crisis in Mexico. This was somewhat controversial at the time, because President Clinton had tried and failed to pass the Mexican Stabilization Act through Congress. Use of the ESF circumvented the need for approval of the legislative branch. In response, Congress passed and President Clinton signed the Mexican Debt Disclosure Act of 1995, which implicitly accepted the use of the ESF, but required reports to Congress every six months on the status of the loans.[6] At the end of the crisis, the U.S. actually made a $500 million profit on the loans.[7]

On September 19, 2008, U.S. Treasury Department announced that up to $50 billion in the ESF would temporarily be made available to guarantee deposits in certain money market funds.[8].

See also

References

  1. ^ "Think of What Washington Could Do with $51B Cache". New York Post. http://www.nypost.com/seven/06122008/business/think_of_what_washington_could_do_with_5_115078.htm.  |date=June 12, 2008 |author=John Crudele
  2. ^ Anna J. Schwartz. "IMF’s Origins as a Blueprint for Its Future". http://web.gc.cuny.edu/eusc/activities/paper/schwartz.htm. 
  3. ^ http://www.treas.gov/offices/international-affairs/esf/basis.shtml Retrieved 2008-09-30.
  4. ^ http://www.treas.gov/offices/international-affairs/esf/finances.shtml Retrieved 2008-09-30.
  5. ^ Jennifer Huang (September 26, 2008). "What's the Exchange Stabilization Fund? A pile of cash that can be used for whatever". Slate magazine. http://www.slate.com/id/2200816/. 
  6. ^ Pub. L. 104–6, title IV, Apr. 10, 1995, 109 Stat. 89, 31 U.S.C. § 5302
  7. ^ Alan Greenspan (September 17, 2007). The Age of Turbulence. The Penguin Press. p. 159. ISBN 1594201315. 
  8. ^ "Treasury Announces Guaranty Program for Money Market Funds". U.S. Department of The Treasury. http://www.treas.gov/press/releases/hp1147.htm. 

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Exchange Stabilization Fund" Read more