BusinessMirror

China asks banks to buy bonds thru prop desks

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CHINA asked some of the nation’s biggest banks to help stabilize the domestic bond market after a wave of fund redemption­s by retail investors fueled the biggest credit selloff since 2015, according to people familiar with the matter.

Regulators asked lenders to buy bonds via their proprietar­y trading desks, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a private matter. The goal is to absorb the selling pressure caused by retail withdrawal­s from some of those same banks’ wealth management products, the people said.

The so-called window guidance on bond purchases includes notes issued by Chinese local government financing vehicles, one of the people said.

The People’s Bank of China didn’t immediatel­y respond to request for a comment.

The guidance underscore­s regulators’ concern that a downward spiral of fund redemption­s and falling bond prices may stoke financial instabilit­y. While China’s local debt market has proved resilient to turmoil in the property industry and wider economy in recent years, bond prices have slumped rapidly since early November as investors shifted money out of fixed-income products and into riskier assets on signs of economic recovery.

Triggers contagion

YIELD premiums on three-year A A Arated corporate bonds have climbed to the highest level since August 2020, according to Bloomberg-compiled data. The spread has widened 35 basis points so far this month, heading for the biggest monthly jump since March 2015.

That has prompted firms, including many LGFVS, to pull a cumulative 84 billion yuan ($12.1 billion) of planned bond sales since the start of November, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“That could trigger contagion and indiscrimi­nate selling.”

Regulators are expanding efforts to support the market after a meeting with market participan­ts last week in which they asked the nation’s biggest insurers to buy bonds being offloaded by wealth products. At the time, banks raised the prospect of stepping in with their proprietar­y trading desks.

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