China Daily

BNP Paribas to underwrite panda bonds

- By WANG YANFEI wangyanfei@chinadaily.com.cn

BNP Paribas China said on Monday the bank has received approval to underwrite yuan-dominated bonds, becoming the third foreign bank to receive the license in China.

Following HSBC and Standard Chartered, BNP Paribas will be allowed to act as a lead underwrite­r on panda bonds issued by foreign corporate issuers in China with the type B license, as China looks to open the door wider to foreign investors, according to the announceme­nt by China’s National Associatio­n of Financial Market Institutio­nal Investors on Friday.

Prior to this, the bank was only allowed to act as an advisor and syndicate member for non-financial corporate panda bonds.

The announceme­nt was made at the same time as the sixth ChinaFranc­e High-Level Economic and Financial Dialogue was held in France.

The bank submitted applicatio­ns around two months ago, and the regulator has chosen the proper timing to make the announceme­nt, according to people familiar with the matter.

CG Lai, BNP Paribas China’s deputy CEO, said with the growing maturity of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns’ onshore operations in China, foreign parent companies are increasing­ly seeking to tap the domestic bond market, as an important and highly cost-effective source of yuan funding to support their Chinese expansion needs.

“With this license, BNP Paribas China can help internatio­nal issuers to tap the world’s largest yuan liquidity market for their offshore projects, which is key to promoting the yuan’s internatio­nalization,” he said.

George Sun, the bank’s head of global markets — China, said: “The move will help to widen the issuer pool beyond Chinese issuers, as well as to increase inbound foreign investment. We see this as a significan­t step forward in China’s financial market liberaliza­tion.”

As of Monday, foreign entities have issued panda bonds worth more than 900 billion yuan ($130 billion) on the interbank market, according to data from Wind Info.

Top Chinese financial regulators have sped up efforts to facilitate the opening-up of the domestic bond market. Earlier this year, the People’s Bank of China and the China Securities Regulatory Commission jointly issued an announceme­nt to promote the unified supervisio­n of granting approval for rating business in the inter-bank bond market, with more measures to simplify rules in order to boost the overall market appetite.

 ?? DANIEL RODRIGUES / BLOOMBERG ??
DANIEL RODRIGUES / BLOOMBERG

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