China Daily (Hong Kong)

AIIB sets up managed credit portfolio to boost ESG standards

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

The Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank’s board of directors has approved $500 million for a managed credit portfolio, which aims to develop infrastruc­ture as an asset class, develop debt capital markets for infrastruc­ture, and promote the integratio­n of Environmen­tal, Social and Governance (ESG) standards in Asian capital markets.

Focusing on infrastruc­ture-related bonds as an asset class, the AIIB Asia ESG Enhanced Credit Managed Portfolio will comprise corporate bonds issued by infrastruc­turerelate­d issuers, including quasisover­eign bonds and green bonds, with proceeds directed to sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture and other productive sectors, said the Beijing headquarte­red multinatio­nal developmen­t bank in a statement posted on its website on Wednesday.

At the initial phase of debt capital market developmen­t, project bonds and other infrastruc­ture-related fixed income securities are not the focus of this credit portfolio, according to a project summary released by the bank.

Geographic­ally, the credit portfolio will target bond issuers from major East Asian countries and some emerging markets in Asia, of which China will take up a considerab­le proportion. The coupon rate is expected to be several hundred basis points higher than the riskfree rate of return, such as the yield on the US 10-year Treasury notes, reported the Shanghai-based financial media conglomera­te Yicai Media Group.

Aligned with the bank’s “green” value, the credit portfolio will include a strong ESG component. Bonds purchased under this portfolio will be screened, assessed and managed based on ESG investing principles that have been framed by AIIB’s Environmen­tal and Social Framework, according to the bank.

“We can unlock the greatest potential to mobilize private capital for infrastruc­ture from institutio­nal investors by developing infrastruc­ture as an asset class and deepening the sustainabl­e debt capital market in Asia,” said D J Pandian, vice-president and chief investment officer of AIIB.

If only a small fraction of the trillions of dollars currently under management by institutio­nal investors were allocated to infrastruc­ture projects, there would be a catalyzing impact on emerging Asia’s growth potential, said Lee Dong-ik, director general for investment operations at AIIB.

“By setting up this portfolio, we hope to develop a proof of concept that over time we will mobilize other like-minded investors to join us in cultivatin­g an ESG market in Asia,” Lee said.

Furthermor­e, the bank will launch the ESG Markets Initiative in partnershi­p with an appointed asset manager to catalyze ESG investing strategies and build capacity with market participan­ts in emerging markets in Asia.

China is making progress on highlighti­ng the importance of ESG factors while making government policies and corporate decisions, according to experts.

The country has achieved preliminar­y results on building a green financing system and became the world’s second largest green bond issuer in 2017, said Zhou Xiaochuan, vice-chairman of the Boao Forum for Asia and former governor of the People’s Bank of China, at the 2018 Annual Conference on Sustainabi­lity in Beijing on May 9.

He noted that the country’s green finance developmen­t has entered a new phase that combines a topdown design with a bottom-up exploratio­n.

China issued green bonds worth $21.5 billion in the first three quarters of 2018, surpassing the $20.9 billion issued in the same period of 2017. The amount of green bonds issued in the third quarter alone reached $8.5 billion, of which 49 percent is aligned with internatio­nal green bond definition­s, according to a newsletter released by China Central Depository & Clearing Co Ltd.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China