The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China opens bond market to foreign investors

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BEIJING: China will allow foreign investors direct access to its massive bond market starting today (July 3), the Chinese central bank said.

A platform allowing one-way “northbound” investment­s from Hong Kong into the Chinese bond market will go into “experiment­al operation” on July 3, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority said in a joint statement, which came as Hong Kong marked the 20th anniversar­y of its handover to China by Britain.

Access to the market will be restricted to “qualified investors” including central banks and sovereign wealth funds, but also commercial banks, insurers, brokerage firms and investment funds, according to the PBOC.

China’s debt market is the third largest in the world, with a cumulative value of about US$10 trillion according to Bloomberg news agency.

However, this booming market has been virtually out of reach for foreign investors, who currently hold only a small portion of the bonds issued in China – less than 1.5 per cent according to Bloomberg estimates.

China has moved gradually toward opening its capital markets. In 2014, a trading link between the Hong Kong and Shanghai stock exchanges was introduced, and another was started in December 2016 between Hong Kong and Shenzhen, China’s other exchange.

The links give foreigners some access to China-listed shares, while also allowing Chinese firms to buy Hong Kong-traded stocks.

The bond move is the latest in a series of liberalisa­tion pledges from China, which has regularly been hit by complaints from foreign companies and trading partners about access to its markets. — AFP DHAKA: Bangladesh’s foreign exchange reserves hit a record US$33.49 billion at the end of June, the central bank said, up US$1.24 million from the previous month.

The reserves are sufficient to cover about 10 months’ worth of imports for the country of 160 million people, and are US$3.45 billion higher than a year ago.

Steady garment exports and remittance­s from Bangladesh­is working overseas, the key drivers of the country’s more than US$200 billion economy, have helped foreign exchange reserves grow steadily in recent years.

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 ?? — Reuters photo ?? An investor sits in front of an electronic board showing stock informatio­n at a brokerage house in Fuyang, Anhui province, China. China will allow foreign investors direct access to its massive bond market starting today, the Chinese central bank said.
— Reuters photo An investor sits in front of an electronic board showing stock informatio­n at a brokerage house in Fuyang, Anhui province, China. China will allow foreign investors direct access to its massive bond market starting today, the Chinese central bank said.

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