Hong Kong slid into recession for the first time in a decade in the third quarter amid protests against what is seen as Beijing’s tightening grip on the Asian financial centre.

HKMA Chief Executive Eddie Yue said the Authority had the commitment and ample resources to maintain city's monetary and financial stability and there was no need to change the peg of the Hong Kong dollar to the U.S. dollar.

"Hong Kong dollar has been stable, the Linked Exchange Rate System (LERS) will not and does not need to change," Yue said during a presentation at the Legislative Council of Hong Kong, or LegCo.

He urged the public not to listen to rumours aimed at spreading unease.

"Hong Kong will not implement capital and foreign exchange control," Yue said, reiterating there has been no noticeable fund outflows from the Hong Kong banking system during the quarter.

Hong Kong's Exchange Fund, which is used to back the Hong Kong dollar, posted a 55% drop in third quarter investment income from the previous quarter.

The HKMA is the key manager of the Exchange Fund, which is under the control of the financial secretary and invests in equities, bonds, foreign exchange and other securities and assets.

The Exchange Fund posted an investment income of HK$20.2 billion ($2.58 billion) compared with an investment gain of HK$9.5 billion in the year earlier period.

The Exchange fund recorded an investment income of HK$198.6 billion in Jan-Sept period this year, up 346% from the same period in 2018.

The Fund saw gains on bonds of HK$106.3 billion for the first nine months, a jump of 264% from a year earlier.

However, Hong Kong equities recorded an HK$12.3 billion investment loss in the third quarter, the second quarterly loss in a row.

MACAU COMPETITION

As part of China's plan to integrate Hong Kong and cities in neighbouring Guangdong province, Macau has been exploring setting up a yuan-denominated stock market, Reuters reported in June.

Yue said Hong Kong had experimented with yuan shares before, but the lack of liquidity versus Hong Kong Dollar stocks made it challenging, and there was also question over whether the local yuan pool was large enough to support this market.

"We have been studying with the (Hong Kong stock) exchange and Securities Futures Commission on whether there is the room or opportune moment to allow more Hong Kong's renminbi-denominated shares, to allow (this market) to better flourish."

Global index providers such as MSCI have added yuan-denominated assets to their widely-tracked benchmarks in recent years.

(Reporting by Twinnie Siu, Donny Kwok and Noah Sin; Editing by Clarence Fernandez and Lincoln Feast.)