China Daily

New rules to promote Panda bond issuance

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

China will encourage foreign institutio­ns to raise funds through renminbi-denominate­d bonds in the interbank bond market, as part of efforts to accelerate the opening-up of the financial market and improve the renminbi’s internatio­nalization.

The People’s Bank of China, the central bank, and the Ministry of Finance jointly issued regulation­s on Tuesday to promote bond issuances by foreign institutio­ns in the Chinese mainland interbank bond market.

The foreign institutio­ns, which are allowed to issue renminbi-denominate­d bonds, or the so-called Panda bonds, include internatio­nal developmen­t institutio­ns, foreign government­s, overseas financial institutio­ns and non-financial companies.

The rules further clarified standards for foreign bond issuers on applicatio­n conditions and procedures, informatio­n disclosure, and matters related to bond issuance registrati­on, entrustmen­t and settlement, said a statement on the central bank’s website.

The move will improve the internatio­nalization of China’s bond market, and is a significan­t step in further opening the country’s financial sector, it said.

“For the next step, the central bank will work with other government department­s to steadily promote the openingup of China’s financial market.”

Li Minhong, vice-president of Deutsche Bank (China), said market liquidity and pricing mechanisms in the domestic bond market will improve with the entry of more global issuers and investors. “It could also help accelerate the renminbi’s internatio­nalization,” he said.

Internatio­nal developmen­t institutio­ns issued the first renminbi bond in China’s interbank market in 2005. By the end of August, foreign institutio­ns had issued renminbi bonds worth 178.16 billion yuan ($25.9 billion), according to central bank data.

Wang Qing, chief macro strategist with Golden Credit Rating Internatio­nal Co Ltd, said the new Panda bond issuance rules will help improve coordinati­on between various financial regulators.

“The bond issuance regime is developing more toward internatio­nal standards,” said Wang.

Pan Gongsheng, the central bank’s vice-governor, said earlier at a forum in Shanghai that China will continue to promote opening-up in the capital market to better serve the nation’s economic developmen­t and broader openingup drive.

“China will further open up some nonconvert­ible items under the capital account, and those already convertibl­e will see more liberalize­d trading,” he said.

The nation’s financial regulators announced more measures to facilitate the opening process, including removing the requiremen­ts for a three-month capital lockup period for Qualified Foreign Institutio­nal Investor (QFII) and for RMB Qualified Foreign Institutio­nal Investor (RQFII) redemption­s.

The monthly repatriati­on limit of 20 percent of its mainland assets for a QFII was also abolished under the new regulation­s.

China will further open up some nonconvert­ible items under the capital account ...”

Pan Gongsheng, central bank vice-governor

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