China launches 4 bln euro sovereign bond deal

Discussion in 'Economics' started by ajacobson, Nov 15, 2021.

  1. ajacobson

    ajacobson

    HONG KONG, Nov 10 (Reuters) - China launched a sale of euro-denominated sovereign bonds on Wednesday aimed at raising 4 billion euros ($4.62 billion), three weeks after the country raised $4 billion via a U.S. dollar bond sale that drew robust demand.

    China's Ministry of Finance is issuing the euro bond in three, seven and 12 year tranches, according to a term sheet seen by Reuters on Wednesday. The ministry said on Oct. 29 it will issue the debt in Hong Kong to raise 4 billion euros.

    Beijing has been issuing sovereign bonds offshore regularly, in a bid to integrate China more closely into the global financial system, and build a price benchmark for overseas issuance of Chinese corporate bonds. It conducted similar euro bond sales last year and in 2019, when Beijing sold its first euro-denominated government debt in 15 years.

    The euro bond sale comes as China's economy is slowing amid a power crunch and surging raw material prices, while China's dollar bond market has tumbled due to fears of contagion from China Evergrande Group's 3333.HK debt problems.


    Chen Jianheng, head of fixed income research at China International Capital Corp (CICC), one of the underwriters of China's euro bond, said Chinese sovereign bonds remain attractive to global investors.

    "We think China will relax its monetary policy to some extent, while the U.S. monetary policy is being tightened," he said, adding that the narrowing yield spread between Chinese sovereign bonds and their U.S. and European counterparts means investors face less interest rate risks buying Chinese bonds.

    Reflecting investor enthusiasm, China's $4 billion sovereign dollar bond issuance last month drew bids worth six times the amount on offer. The bonds were also sold at record-low spreads for such issuance, according to CICC.

    Initial pricing guidance for the euro-denominated bond has been set at the mid swap rate plus 20 basis points area for the 3-year deal, 40 basis points area for the 7-year, and 65 basis points area for the 12-year tranche, the term sheet showed.

    CICC's Chen suggested that China should issue offshore sovereign bonds more frequently, and increase the tenors of the bonds on offer, so as to further improve the yield curve - a benchmark for Chinese companies to price their offshore issuance.
     
  2. Nobert

    Nobert

    India launched $1T of bonds few days ago as well. I wonder, is that coincidence or not.
     
    Last edited: Nov 15, 2021
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  3. xandman

    xandman

    Are single digit billion dollar bonds still worth talking about?
     
    beginner66 likes this.
  4. mervyn

    mervyn

    I used to buy some of China's dollar bonds, good risk reward in comparison of g7 issues.
     
  5. Nobert

    Nobert

    ,,Bonds are for idiots" - Warren B.

    No offence @mervyn
     
    beginner66 likes this.
  6. JSOP

    JSOP

    Ok so we are diversifying away from Chinese supply chains but now we are giving money directly to China? LOL Has anybody done any risk analysis on these purchases? Its political risk and default risk? What if one day China decides to just not pay? I mean US is raising debt ceilings and everybody is scared of US defaulting on its debt and yet China's economy is also slowing down and nobody is concerned about China defaulting? If China defaults, what's our recourse when China's military is one of the largest and advanced in the world? And everybody is all OK with this? These bonds even generated "robust demands"?
     
  7. mervyn

    mervyn

    not necessarily. EM bond yield is on par with any of the US domestic real estate investments, i.e. your rental apartment, without headache. After HOA, property tax, SALT, you will be lucky getting 3%, without paying yourself a salary. I remembered the first China gov bond A+ was at 4.125%, 200x oversubscribed. Evergrand 2 year NR was at 12.25%. beats diy rental business.

    Singapore debt market is very active, something about loaning money is considered more safe than trading stocks.
     
    Nobert likes this.