Arab Times

IMF forecast to add $40bn yuan to SDR basket

Foreign funds to follow lender’s lead with yuan bond holdings

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HONG KONG, Nov 12, (RTRS): Foreign asset managers are preparing to increase their exposure to yuan-denominate­d bonds, as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) looks likely this month to approve the inclusion of China’s “redback” into its currency basket.

A decision by the IMF to add the currency, also known as the renminbi (RMB), to its $280 billion basket of reserves would prompt central banks to follow suit, and fund managers say they, too, would make similar adjustment­s to their portfolios.

“The endorsemen­t from the IMF raises the RMB’s profile as an internatio­nal reserve currency. We think many official investors will start to allocate to RMB assets,” AXA Investment Managers said in a report.

Analysts forecast the IMF would give the yuan an initial weighting of around 14 percent in the basket, which goes by the official title Special Drawing Rights (SDR), bringing about $40 billion direct inflows in the next few years.

“Most central banks we’ve spoken to are supportive of the inclusion and are preparing for it. Several central banks are considerin­g their first allocation and some considerin­g increasing their existing ones,” said Jukka Pihlman, head of central banks and sovereign wealth funds at Standard Chartered.

But central bank holdings would be the tip of the iceberg.

“That will trigger a lot of FX reserve managers to rebalance,” said Stephen Chang, head of Asian fixed income at J.P. Morgan Asset Management.

“Global investors are certainly underinves­ted in Chinese bonds as they just started from pretty much zero,” he added.

Together with other reserve managers and investors, a re-allocation annually of about 1 percent of global FX reserves outside of China to yuan assets is expected in the short term. AXA estimates total inflows to be around $600 billion over the next five years.

That would, however, require Beijing to lift or relax existing programmes limiting foreign inward investment — and foreign investors have not yet even used up the quotas allowed to them.

Fund managers and analysts say the vast bulk of any new flow will target fixed-income products, especially highgrade bonds issued by the Chinese government and policy banks, which offer high returns at low risk.

“We are progressiv­ely increasing our exposure to yuan bonds, and we are more interested in onshore government bonds compared to (offshore) ‘dim sum’ bonds,” said Bryan Collins, a portfolio manager at Fidelity Worldwide Investment.

Foreign participat­ion in China’s $7 trillion onshore bond market is a meagre 2 percent at present, and Beijing is keen to broaden the sources of funding as the economy slows.

Bankers say that what the government has done to meet the technical criteria to get included in the SDR should in itself lead to an increase in foreign holdings of yuan assets. A man walks past a billboard scene of the Beijing skyline on a street in Beijing on Nov 12. Under what Chinese leaders call the ‘new normal’, the country logged its worst economic performanc­e since the global financial crisis in the third

quarter, with the economy growing just 6.9 percent. (AFP)

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