The Pak Banker

China raises $6b as US investors look past tensions

- HONG KONG -AFP

China has raised $6 billion in a dollar bond issue that was offered to U.S. investors for the first time just weeks before the Nov. 3 election, a term-sheet reviewed by Reuters showed. The deal, the fifth foreign currency denominate­d bond since China reinstated its offshore debt sales programme in 2017, attracted $27.2 billion in orders, the term-sheet showed.

China has issued four dollar bonds and one euro bond in the past three years. The debt was priced at 25 basis points above U.S. Treasuries for the $1.25 billion three-year tranche, 30 basis points for the $2.25 billion 5-year tranche, 50 basis points for the $2 billion 10-year tranche and 80 basis points for the $500 million 30-year tranche, the term-sheet showed.

"The successful issuance of the U.S. sovereign bonds has helped establish and improve a yield benchmark of more market significan­ce for Chinese issuers," China's finance ministry said in a statement. It was the first time China has offered debt to U.S.-based investors who were most active in the longer-dated tranches of the transactio­n.

U.S investors, primarily fund managers, were the largest buyers of the 30-year tranche, picking up 47% of the $500 million sold, according to the term-sheet. The rising tensions between Washington and Beijing did not deter U.S.-based investors from participat­ing in the deal, according to one person with direct knowledge of the matter.

The person could not be named because he was not authorised to speak to media. "We did not see the geopolitic­al situation scaring people away," he said.

The deal was finalised on Wednesday as the stand-off between Washington and Beijing showed no signs of easing. The U.S. State Department has submitted a proposal for the Trump administra­tion to add China's Ant Group to a trade blacklist, according to two people familiar with the matter, before the financial technology firm is slated to go public in Shanghai and Hong Kong.

India has decided not to mandate secondary listings for domestic firms that float shares on a foreign stock exchange as it prepares to announce a new policy within weeks, two senior government sources and two industry executives told Reuters. India is close to drawing up rules for companies to directly float overseas without first having to list shares at home, as a way to help startups attain higher valuations and access capital more easily.

But concerns grew after officials privately told global investors and companies in meetings they were considerin­g mandating a secondary listing for Indian firms on domestic exchanges, as a way of ensuring investors and markets prospered, Reuters has reported. Asked about the proposal, a top government official directly involved in the discussion said there would be no mandatory requiremen­t of a secondary listing, however.

"We will not mandate (secondary) India listing," the official said on Thursday, without explaining why the government changed its stance. The official sought anonymity as the discussion­s were private. The finance ministry and capital markets regulator SEBI did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

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