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Beijing debt added to key global bonds index

- AFP Beijing

Chinese government debt is set to be included on a key global bonds index, which could see tens of billions of dollars of foreign investment in the country's increasing­ly internatio­nalized financial markets.

The move by FTSE Russell comes as trading in China becomes more controvers­ial in Washington as relations between the superpower­s grow fraught.

But analysts said the attraction of higher yields — the yield on 10-year Chinese government bonds is 2.4 percentage points higher than US Treasuries — and a relatively stable currency have made the country an attractive prospect for investors.

Inclusion in the World Government Bond index, which could begin next October if approved, means CGBs will be a musthave asset for investment giants such as pension funds desperate for good returns as the global bond market is battered by the pandemic.

Pan Gongsheng, deputy governor at the central People's Bank of China, said investment­s in the Chinese market had grown more than 40 percent over the past three years, with 2.8 trillion yuan ($410 billion) of Chinese bonds held by internatio­nal investors. Goldman Sachs said inclusion could see up to $140 billion flood into the debt market. AxiCorp. strategist Stephen Innes said the move was “big news” which would open up China's bond market to “a broader band of passive investors.” FTSE Russell, which is owned by the London Stock Exchange, decided against including Chinese debt in the index last year owing to several worries such as liquidity and the settlement of transactio­ns, but it said the concerns had been addressed. In the statement its CEO Waqas Samad said authoritie­s had “worked hard to enhance the infrastruc­ture of their government bond market.”

Jason Pang of JP Morgan Asset Management, said that while foreign ownership of CGBs had risen to about 9 percent from 2 percent in recent years, it is still well below the 15-30 percent seen in other Asian markets.

But he added: “It is increasing­ly clear that China bonds' globalizat­ion is simply a matter of time.”

 ??  ?? FTSE Russell CEO Waqas Samad. Supplied
FTSE Russell CEO Waqas Samad. Supplied

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