The Phnom Penh Post

EU states adopt ‘panda bonds’ in Chinese outreach

- Juliette Rabat

EU MEMBERS Hungar y, Poland, Portugal and soon Austria are strengthen­ing ties with China by issuing attractive “panda bonds” that help Beijing raise its profile on internatio­nal financial markets.

Ita ly might join the trend as wel l, despite EU concer ns that China may be seeking a way to increase its inf luence on the continent.

On May 30, Portugal became the first eurozone nation to issue renminbi-denominate­d bonds, raising two billion renminbi ($280 million) via a three-year instrument at a rate of 4.09 per cent.

The offer attracted strong demand, and Portugal’s junior finance minister Ricardo Mourinho Felix told the financial news website ECO that Lisbon’s goal was “to enter a large market with strong liquidity”.

Poland and Hungary have already issued bonds on the Chinese market, in 2016 and 2017-2018 respective­ly, and Austria and Italy – eurozone members like Portugal – have said they might do so as well.

The cost of borrowing on Chinese markets is much higher than in Europe however, so the reasons for such a move likely lie elsewhere.

Portugal, which faced problems with financing when it was bailed out by the EU and IMF in 2011-14, now can offer less than 1.0 per cent to borrow money for 10 years on European markets.

But by helping China become a bigger actor on the global financial stage, government­s can get into Beijing’s good books, and attract investment in sectors like financial services, infrastruc­ture and transporta­tion.

The Portuguese port of Sines is interested in attracting Chinese investment as part of Beijing’s global “Belt and Road” network, for example.

“There are also key political or reputation­al concerns,” notes Liang Si, an Asian debt market expert at French bank BNP Paribas.

“Any kind of sovereign issuer issuing in panda bonds could be seen as a positive political gesture to further establish their ties with China, now the second biggest economy in the world.”

Limited financial interest

The bonds have existed since 2005 but they took off four years ago when the Chinese c e nt ral bank decided t o encourage their use as Beijing launched the “Silk Road” initiative aimed at furthering China’s economic and technical influence.

“Little by little, China is trying to open its market to investors and transform its money into a reserve currency,” said Frederic Rollin, an investment strategy adviser at Pictet AM.

At $48 billion, the total amount of “panda bonds” i s s ued t o dat e pal l s i n comparison with the overall value of China’s debt market, which is around $13 trillion.

“There are few foreign issuers in the yuan market . . . [because it is] not particular­ly attractive,” acknowledg­ed Frederic Gabizon from HSBC, using another name for the renminbi currency.

His London-based bank was one of those underwriti­ng the Portuguese issue.

Typical operations have remained small, at between $145 million and $434 million for short-term issues.

“China’s importance from an economic point of view is well establishe­d, and many countries therefore wish to help it develop its financial markets,” Gabizon explained.

Amid growing trade tension bet ween China a nd t he US, Portugal has followed Greece and several Eastern European countries in joining t he “Belt and Road” project. Ita ly has as wel l, becoming t he f i rst member of the Group of Seven (G7) i ndust r ia l ised nat ions to back t he project.

Rome has also said it would consider issuing “panda bonds”, as Austria did in late April.

That has caught the attention of big EU nations like France and Germany.

“Since 2009/2010, China has begun to look for Trojan Horses” in Europe, said Christophe­r Dembik at Saxo Banque.

Beijing targets “countries that often have a greater need for investment­s and accept in exchange, and through an implicit agreement”, to support the “panda bond” market, he added.

France and Germany, which have no problem placing sovereign debt in euros, are wary of Beijing’s intentions.

It is looking for the “weak underbelly for Chinese investment in Europe and to cons o l i d a t e” a s s e t s a l r e a d y acquired in Spain and Portugal despite reservatio­ns of other EU member states, the president of Paris-based think tank Asia Centre, Jean-Francois Di Meglio, said in November.

 ?? PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA/AFP ?? Portugal’s deepwater port in Sines could be an Atlantic gate for China’s ‘Belt and Road’ project.
PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA/AFP Portugal’s deepwater port in Sines could be an Atlantic gate for China’s ‘Belt and Road’ project.

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