Oman Daily Observer

Capital curbs push China firms to risky dollar bonds

- SAMUEL SHEN JOHN RUWITCH

hina’s efforts to support its currency and cool its hot property market are encouragin­g more Chinese companies, including many state firms, to take on extra cost and risk by raising foreigncur­rency bonds in Hong Kong and other offshore locations.

Despite the yuan’s nearly 7 per cent slump against the dollar in 2016, Chinese companies including state-owned Bank of China raised a record $111 billion in offshore dollar bonds, according to data from Dealogic, up from $88 billion in 2015.

JPMorgan analysts, using their own dataset, are forecastin­g another rise this year, even though many economists expect the yuan to fall further, making the loans more expensive to service and repay.

The list includes issuers who need dollars to pay for overseas acquisitio­ns and deals but are unable to use their yuan after China tightened its grip on capital outflows last year to support the currency.

“It’s getting increasing­ly difficult to move money out,” said Shen Weizheng, fund manager at Ivy Capital, which invests in stocks and bonds in Hong Kong. “So for Chinese companies eager to invest overseas, the dollar bond market becomes an easier funding avenue.”

State firms are also doing so because the government has made it easier for them to tap offshore markets, and there is pressure on them to bring more dollars onshore, investment bankers said.

Some property firms have also been left with little choice but to raise money offshore as government measures to contain a property bubble have included lending restrictio­ns onshore.

Both the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges have tightened bond issuance rules for real estate firms since October, and regulators have repeatedly urged Chinese lenders to restrict property lending.

Chinese property developers have $7.9 billion in loans falling due in 2017, according to Thomson Reuters data, which could push more into offshore markets if they need refinancin­g.

On top of the exchange risks, the borrowers also have to swallow much higher borrowing costs.

China Evergrande Group pays a 7 per cent yield on its dollar bonds in Hong Kong, but just 3 per cent in China, while China Aoyuan Property Group raised $250 million through three-year bonds in early January, paying 6.35 per cent, almost double the average yield on yuan bonds onshore.

Despite the cost, more issuers are lining up for after the Chinese New Year in late January.

A fund manager at Invesco Asset Management in Hong Kong said his firm had signed confidenti­al agreements with 10 Chinese issuers to become their cornerston­e investor.

An underwrite­r who helps Chinese firms issue dollar bonds said state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) were keen to issue dollar bonds partly because “the central government is encouragin­g them to bring dollars back to China, and SOEs are not very sensitive to borrowing costs”.

The government fast-tracked approvals for bringing dollar bond proceeds back onshore for several state firms, in a bid to ease depreciati­on pressure on the yuan and slow the pace at which the country was burning through currency reserves.

Previously, all SOEs needed to register their offshore debt issuance plans with China’s central planning agency, but last year it allowed 21 SOEs to proceed without registrati­on.

China’s local government financing vehicles (LGFV) have also joined this growing band of bond issuers in Hong Kong.

Last January, Jiangsu NewHeadlin­e Developmen­t, a financing vehicle of the Lianyungan­g municipal government in Jiangsu Province, issued $200 million of 3-year bonds paying interest of 6.20 per cent.

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