China’s rise to second-largest trade funding currency fueled by affordable yuan

China’s rise to second-largest trade funding currency fueled by affordable yuan

SHANGHAI/SINGAPORE, Nov 17 (Reuters) -​ Global companies are making ‌a⁢ beeline​ for China’s debt markets, issuing record amounts of yuan-denominated bonds‍ and ​borrowing ​heavily from mainland banks,​ capitalising on rock-bottom yuan interest rates as funding ⁣costs​ elsewhere jump.Companies ​and banks are raising record amounts of cash ⁤through ⁢yuan bonds issued in mainland China and ‌in Hong Kong, known⁢ as panda and dim sum bonds, respectively.The surge in their borrowing from​ Chinese banks has catapulted the yuan past the euro into becoming the second-biggest currency used in global ⁣trade finance, providing a fillip to Beijing’s ambitions to internationalize⁣ the⁤ yuan.The global‌ rush to borrow from China is counterintuitive, coming as international ‍investors are ⁤shunning the world’s second-biggest ⁢economy out of concerns about geopolitical tensions and weak growth, says Fiona Lim, senior FX strategist⁢ at Maybank.”While the fundamental story is not compelling for Chinese investors looking for growth, ‍the⁣ depreciation‍ of the yuan as well as ‌the rate ⁢cuts result in a much cheaper‍ cost of borrowing,”​ Lim said.Foreign companies such as German carmaker BMW (BMWG.DE) and ⁢Crédit Agricole S.A ⁤(CAGR.PA)‍ as well as overseas units‌ of Chinese firms raised a record 125.5 billion ‌yuan ($17.33 billion) selling ⁢panda bonds during the January-October period, a 61% jump from the ⁢same period last ‍year.The National Bank of Canada (NA.TO) raised ⁢1 billion yuan from the sale ‌of a three-year panda bond at a coupon of 3.2% late last ⁢month, a bargain compared to rates of 4.5% at home.The issuance of dim‍ sum bonds ‌in Hong Kong also hit a record​ high, surging 62%⁣ from a‌ year ago to 343⁢ billion‍ yuan during the first eight months. Issuance of yuan-denominated loans ⁤in the​ city also ⁤soared.For China, the growing share of⁢ yuan in global financing ticks one of its main internationalisation priorities, though ‌the recent burst of⁤ activity appears to have been overwhelmingly for domestic use.”Panda bonds are steadily promoting the renminbi’s function as a funding currency”, the People’s ‌Bank of China (PBOC) said a report last month.‍ It has been motivating banks to ⁤lend to offshore firms and allowed⁢ broader use of yuan outside ⁤China.The yuan’s share⁤ as a global currency in trade⁤ finance jumped⁣ to 5.8% in September from 3.91% at the start of the year, trumping the euro for the first time, according to SWIFT. The international ⁣payments system dominates the traffic ​of letters of credit – a form of short-term financing that facilitates trade.Regardless, it barely ⁣scrapes the dollar’s dominance at‌ 84.2%.Several⁤ gauges of yuan internationalisation –⁢ including a Standard Chartered Bank tracker measuring ‍the global use of the ‍yuan, and Bank‌ of China’s Cross-border RMB Index (CRI) — all hit record ⁤highs this year.TOO EARLY TO CELEBRATEHowever, analysts point to the limited⁣ use and circulation of international yuan bond proceeds so far, ‌and say it’s​ premature⁣ to trumpet…

Original from www.reuters.com

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