The Freeman

China welcomes Phl's Panda bond offering

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MANILA— China on Monday welcomed the Philippine­s’ planned maiden Panda bond offering to diversify funding sources further, taking advantage of the renewed and strengthen­ing ties between the two countries that soured over a sea dispute.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III — who spearheade­d a “non-deal roadshow” in China last month to entice potential buyers of the Panda bonds — earlier said the government may raise around $200 million from the issuance of Panda bonds or yuan-denominate­d securities in the second half of the year.

In a press conference in Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Hua Chunying welcomed such a move from the Philippine government, adding that such cooperatio­n would help develop Manila’s dilapidate­d infrastruc­ture.

“We believe the relevant measures will help deepen our cooperatio­n on finance and investment and boost the Philippine­s' infrastruc­ture constructi­on and advance the China-Philippine relations in an indepth way,” Hua said.

“Since the overall turnaround of China-Philippine relations last year, cooperatio­n in various fields between the two countries have thrived,” she added.

Ties between the two countries strained after the Philippine­s filed and won a case in a United Nations-backed tribunal against China’s sweeping claims in the South China Sea.

Taking office shortly before Manila’s legal victory against Beijing, President Rodrigo Duterte sought warmer relations with the Asian power by setting aside the internatio­nal court’s ruling in exchange for billion dollars’ worth of Chinese investment­s.

According to Dominguez, the administra­tion’s ambitious infrastruc­ture program called “Build Build Build” would be funded by a combinatio­n of resources from the state’s proposed comprehens­ive tax reform program, foreign developmen­t aid and commercial loans.

As of June this year, the Philippine government has submitted a total of 40 projects for possible support from China. Fifteen of these are for possible loan financing, while 25 were submitted for feasibilit­y study support.

Meanwhile, some lawmakers in the Senate are pushing for the improvemen­t of the government’s vetting system for foreign-funded investment­s.

The government is seeking P140 billion from China to fund three flagship infrastruc­ture projects, according to the Department of Finance.

(Philstar.com)

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