Table 1 – International reserves
| Market Value | Average return in reserve currencies, p.a. | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EUR mil | Share | 5 years | 3 years | 1 year | |
| Liquidity tranche | 30 277 | 25.2% | 0.31% | 0.52% | 2.22% |
| Investment tranche | 89 895 | 74.8% | 2.06% | 0.67% | 3.51% |
| Total | 120 172 | 1.17% | 0.50% | 3.23% | |
Table 2 – Division of the international reserves by investment instrument
| Type of investment | Share |
|---|---|
| Bonds | 58.6% |
| – government | 45.3% |
| – government agencies | 6.3% |
| – supranational issuers | 3.1% |
| – MBS and covered bonds | 3.8% |
| Money market instruments | 21.2% |
| Equities | 19.5% |
| Other | 0.7% |
Table 3 – Currency allocation of the international reserves
| Currency | Share |
|---|---|
| EUR | 52.1% |
| USD | 29.6% |
| CAD | 7.5% |
| AUD | 3.8% |
| GBP | 3.4% |
| JPY | 1.3% |
| SEK | 1.0% |
| gold | 0.8% |
| SDR | 0.5% |
| other currencies | 0.0% |
Explanatory notes:
- The average return in reserve currencies p.a. is calculated as the weighted average of the returns on portfolios in the currencies of the respective portfolios; the weights are the ratios of the portfolios’ market value to the total;
- Five years, three years and one year are moving periods, i.e., for example, a one-year period contains data for the last four quarters.
- Bonds are broken down into four major categories:
- bonds issued by governments,
- bonds of government agencies, i.e. issuers with a close relationship with the central government, whose liabilities are usually explicitly guaranteed by the government,
- supranational issuers include, for example, the BIS, IBRD, EBRD, EIB, etc.,
- MBS bonds and covered bonds are mortgage-backed bonds (bonds guaranteed by selected US agencies – MBS or covered bonds typically issued in Europe).
- Other is the sum of the market value of gold and derivative positions, for example, positions in futures contracts, interest rate and FX swaps, etc.