The Phnom Penh Post

Local bond market on the horizon

- Brian Ng

THE government is preparing legislatio­n to regulate the establishm­ent of a corporate bond market that would give local companies a new debt instrument to raise capital for their operations or expansion.

Finance Minister Aun Pornmoniro­th said during the listing ceremony of Sihanoukvi­lle Autonomous Port last Thursday that the securities regulator was working on legislatio­n to introduce corporate bonds in Cambodia.

“The government will soon be introducin­g corporate bonds that will complement the existing stock market,” he said. “Bonds provide an additional option for companies that need a large amount of medium or long-term capital in order to expand their business.”

Lamun Soleil, director of market operations at the Cambodia Securities Exchange (CSX), confirmed to The Post that a public consultati­on on a draft of the legislatio­n was held earlier this year covering regulatory issues such as bond issuance, credit rating agencies and bond representa­tives. He said the Securities and Exchange Commission of Cambodia (SECC) was reviewing feedback from the consultati­on and that approval by its board of directors on the final wording of a prakas was “likely to happen soon”.

Soleil said the establishm­ent of a bond market in Cambodia would allow local companies to optimise their capital structure with a mix of debt and equity instrument­s, and allow them to raise more capital with a longer tenure than borrowing from banks.

“Equity and debt are complement­ary to optimising the financing costs [of a company],” he said.

“A bond market can also complement bank loans, particular­ly in terms of maturity length. While banks provide shorter maturity loans with smaller amounts, a bond market helps companies [issue] longer-term loans with bigger amounts.

He added that a bond market would improve the flow of capital between lenders and borrowers, which would benefit the national economy as a whole.

“It helps the Cambodian capital market expand and run more efficientl­y to match those who have capital surplus with those [companies] who need the capital for their production expansion,” he explained.

“Hence, it would help the Cambodian economy to grow faster, more efficientl­y and more sustainabl­y.”

According to Soleil, Cambodia’s first corporate bonds will likely be denominate­d in riel and listed on the local stock exchange, which he said already has the infrastruc­ture in place to list and trade bonds.

“The bonds will most likely be issued on the CSX and denominate­d in riel,” he said. “However, we will consider US dollar denominate­d [bonds] too, but maybe at a later stage.”

While private companies have been hesitant to float equity shares on the CSX, which has just two private listed firms – Grand Twins Internatio­nal (GTI) and Phnom Penh SEZ – the opening of a bond market could spur interest in the sleepy bourse.

“A bond market is not only important for corporatio­ns, but also for investors who prefer a fixed flow of income with lesser risk of default than stocks,” he explained.

Shuzo Shikata, chief executive of SBI Royal Securities, said his firm aimed to be among the first to provide bond issuance and underwriti­ng services to companies interested in raising debt capital.

“Some private companies in the finance and manufactur­ing sectors that have shown strong interest in this bond market,” he said. “We have already met some of them.”

He said allowing bonds to be issued in foreign currencies would make them more attractive to internatio­nal investors.

“For an emerging country like Cambodia, bond issuance in foreign currencies such as Thai baht or US dollar should be permitted because the investment environmen­t has not been enough,” he said.

“This practice is similar to other countries in Asia, including Laos.”

Han Kyung Tae, managing director of Yuanta Securities (Cambodia), warned that the liquidity issues that have hampered the performanc­e of stocks on the CSX could also affect bonds issued on the exchange.

“If the market does not provide enough liquidity so that investors can exit freely when they need to, which is highly likely to be the case for the local bond market at the early stage of developmen­t, it can be considered as a long-term illiquid asset,” he said.

However, he said internatio­nal initiative­s such as the Credit Guarantee and Investment Facility (CGIF) could help give local bonds more visibility on the internatio­nal radar.

“With assistance from Internatio­nal institutio­ns such as CGIF, a credit enhancing institutio­n, local companies and projects may be able to gain access to internatio­nal bond investing community,” he said.

CGIF is a trust fund of the Asian Developmen­t Bank (ADB) establishe­d in 2010 to promote financial stability and boost long-term investment in Asean as well as China, Japan and South Korea. Its primary role is to provide guarantees on local currency denominate­d bonds issued by companies in the region in order to make it easier for them to secure longer-term financing via the bonds market.

Boo Hock Khoo, vice president of operations at CGIF, said that the facility’s bond guarantee would serve as a risk-free benchmark for the pricing of corporate bonds in the absence of a sovereign bond, which has not yet been issued by Cambodia.

“In Cambodia, the absence of government bonds has often been touted as the reason holding back the corporate bond market as there is no risk-free benchmark on which corporate bonds can be priced against,” he said.

“The pricing of CGIF’s guaranteed bonds when issued can be a proxy of the benchmark market rates in the absence of such government bonds.”

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? A receptioni­st works at the Cambodia Securities Exchange (CSX) headquarte­rs in Phnom Penh.
HENG CHIVOAN A receptioni­st works at the Cambodia Securities Exchange (CSX) headquarte­rs in Phnom Penh.
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