The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market January 2021
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 1
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond MarketJanuary 2021
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 2
Researched and authored by: Andy Hill (ICMA) and Yanqing Jia (ICMA)
ICMA would like to thank the individual experts, and their firms, who participated in the interviews for this study. Without their invaluable input and insight this report would not have been possible: Algomi; Bank of China; BlackRock; Bloomberg; BNP Paribas; China Central Depository & Clearing Co.; China Foreign Exchange Trade System; DBS Bank; Dealogic; Hong Kong Exchange/Bond Connect; Hong Kong Monetary Authority; HSBC: Industrial and Commercial Bank of China; Industrial and Commercial Bank of China International; Schroders; SGX; Standard Chartered Bank; UBS Bond Port.
ICMA would further like to thank the various sources of data used in this report, in particular Bloomberg, whose data is featured extensively and with kind permission.
This paper is provided for information purposes only and should not be relied upon as legal, financial, or other professional advice. While the information
contained herein is taken from sources believed to be reliable, ICMA does not represent or warrant that it is accurate or complete and neither ICMA
nor its employees shall have any liability arising from or relating to the use of this publication or its contents. Likewise, data providers who provided
information used in this report do not represent or warrant that such data is accurate or complete and no data provider shall have any liability arising
from or relating to the use of this publication or its contents.
© International Capital Market Association (ICMA), Zurich, 2021. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means without permission from ICMA.
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 3
Table of contents
Executive summary 4
Introduction 6Why this report? 6
Scope and methodology 6
The onshore corporate bond market 7Market size 7
Regulatory framework for accessing the onshore bond market 10QFII/RQFII 10CIBM Direct 10Bond Connect 11Connecting the interbank and exchange markets 12Tax exemption 12
The economic backdrop 13
Returns 15
Global index inclusion 17
Credit ratings and defaults 18
Secondary market liquidity 21Secondary market structure 21Hedging and funding markets 23
Panda bond market 24
The offshore corporate bond market 26Market size 26
Sector analysis 29
Market structure 30Issuance 30Investors 31Secondary market liquidity 32
Valuations 33
Conclusion 36
Annex I China onshore bond types 37
Annex II Bibliography 38
Annex III Acronyms used in this report 39
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 4
Executive summary
Why this report?
Given the increasing importance of China in the global bond markets, particularly in light of significant reforms and initiatives to attract foreign investors, as well as the inclusion of China in major global bond indices, ICMA recognised that there was a need to focus more closely on the trends, opportunities, and challenges related to the internationalization of the China corporate bond market, both from an onshore and offshore perspective.
Onshore market
China’s onshore bond market, at approximately $15trillion equivalent of outstandings, is the second largest in the world, after the US. ICMA estimates the overall size of the outstanding onshore credit bond market to be approximately valued at $5.8trillion of which $3.7trillion are non-financial corporates and $2.1trillion are financial bonds. Yet while foreign investors take up some 3% of the total market and continue to increase holdings of government and policy bank bonds, it is estimated that overseas holdings of corporate bonds constitute less than 1% of the market.
There are three main routes via which the international investor community can access the China onshore bond market: (i) QFII/RQFII; (ii) CIBM Direct; and (iii) Bond Connect. Interviewees outline the pros and cons of each of these, and some suggest that ideally there should be one single point of entry for foreign investors. Ongoing initiatives to make the QFII/RQFII regime less operationally burdensome, as well as to connect the exchange and interbank markets, are intended to open the overall bond market further to foreign investors and can only be helpful in providing global access to the China credit bond market.
Participants indicate that one of the main draws for investing in China’s corporate bond markets is the strong economic backdrop. While the rate of GDP growth has slowed over the past decade, it remains on a strong upward trajectory. Interviewees also note that despite the extensive lockdown imposed in early 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, this proved to be effective in containing the spread of the virus, and by the second quarter the economy was back into growth mode.
Interviewees also cite the relatively high nominal returns of China’s onshore bond markets, especially in comparison with more developed global bond markets where yields are close to zero or even negative, including higher rated corporate bonds. However, interviewees also note that while nominal returns are competitive, on a relative value basis onshore credit markets are expensive, particularly when compared to the offshore market.
A major catalyst for foreign inflows into the onshore bond market since 2019, particularly passive investment flows, has been the inclusion of China in various global bond indices. Interviewees suggest that these anticipated inflows off the back of index inclusions are likely to be conservative, with some suggesting $600billion or more of passive investment flows are still to find their way into the onshore market.
Interviewees cite challenges with assessing the credit quality of underlying corporates as one of the main barriers to entry to the onshore market. There are nine domestic credit rating agencies (some state-owned), which adds to the confusing landscape, but perhaps more disconcerting is the general skew to the higher end of the credit spectrum and the resulting lack of credit differentiation. This implies the need for investors to dedicate time and resources to their own proprietary credit analysis.
Intertwined with the challenge of assessing credit quality is the incidence and outcome of corporate defaults. Prior to 2015 corporate defaults were relatively unheard of, but even as the credit market began to grow, there was still an assumption, and observation, that particularly in the case of State Owned Enterprises (SOEs), the government would intervene to backstop any company in difficulty. Since 2018 it has become clear that the state has taken a less interventionist stance, and while defaults remain relatively few, they are no longer the rarity they were. However, interviewees point out that the increase in corporate defaults is not in itself a bad thing and is an important element of a maturing market.
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 5
Interviewees consistently cite a lack of secondary market liquidity as a major barrier to the internationalization of the onshore credit market. This lack of liquidity is attributed to a number of factors, including bifurcated liquidity across exchange and interbank markets, a fragmented landscape of market-makers, small infrequently traded issues that rarely come back into the market, a lack of supply of longer maturities, concerns around market transparency and opacity of price formation, and the absence of both a credit repo specials market and a Single Name - Credit Default Swaps (SN-CDS) market.
Offshore market
Since 2010, China has come from virtually nowhere to dominate the Asia-Pacific international corporate bond market. ICMA estimates the size of the offshore China corporate bond market to be approximately $752billion equivalent nominal outstanding, or around 30% of the total APAC international corporate bond market and 38% of APAC international USD issuance.
Unlike the onshore corporate bond market, the offshore market is heavily skewed to financials (50% of outstanding nominal value), and predominantly real estate financing (45% of financials), with banks making up most of the remainder. Among non-financial corporate issuers, energy, industrials, utilities and communications constitute approximately 75% of outstandings.
Much of the impetus for Chinese corporates to tap the international debt markets is the result of China’s rapid global economic expansion, and the need to fund overseas investment and acquisitions, primarily in USD. Furthermore, it is suggested that while in many cases Chinese corporates could fund themselves through the onshore market, potentially at better levels, there has been a big push in recent years, particularly at the local government level, for Chinese credits to establish themselves as familiar names in the international market.
Interviewees suggest that initially as the international market began to grow, investors were almost exclusively the offshore entities of Chinese investment firms, securities houses, and private banks looking to invest their USD. These investors were familiar with the names coming to market and comfortable with the more conservative international credit ratings. However, this investor base appears to be diversifying in recent years, with more
regional and global asset managers looking to diversify their portfolios while seeking out higher returns.
Interviewees paint a mixed picture of liquidity in the offshore China corporate bond market. This is against a backdrop of an international APAC credit market where participants already report challenged secondary market liquidity that is intrinsically skewed toward the bid side of the market. Interviewees also point to smaller issue sizes, the propensity for Chinese investors to hold to maturity, the lack of a developed SN-CDS market, and patchy repo availability as significant constraints on secondary market liquidity. That said, several suggest that liquidity in the offshore credit market is comparably better to that in the onshore market.
Conclusion
While barriers to the $5.8trillion onshore credit market for international investors appear to be multiple and many are likely to persist in the short-term, they are not insurmountable. As international investors and investment firms become more comfortable investing and operating in the rates segment of the onshore, so it would seem inevitable that in time they will begin to look further along the credit curve. The potential for transforming the China onshore credit market into a truly global market is significant.
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 6
Why this report?
In 2018, ICMA published the report The Asia-Pacific Cross-Border Corporate Bond Secondary Market,1 which aimed to analyze and document the state and evolution of the international APAC credit markets, primarily from the perspective of USD, EUR, and GBP denominated issuance. The analysis highlighted two major themes: the growing prominence of corporates from mainland China in the cross-border market, particularly issuing in USD, and also the ongoing liberalization of the onshore bond markets, which provided opportunities for the internationalization of the CNY corporate bond market.
In terms of the offshore APAC market, the past few years have seen Chinese corporate issuers come to dominate that market, making up 41% of new issuance (nominal value) since 2010. Meanwhile, since 2015, China’s onshore corporate bond market has grown rapidly, not only in terms of nominal size but also as a relative segment of what is now the world’s second largest bond market. Yet despite significant strides to make China’s onshore bond markets accessible to international investors, the corporate bond market remains a relatively small portion of foreign holdings.
Given the increasing importance of China in the global bond markets, particularly in light of significant reforms and initiatives to attract foreign investors, as well as the inclusion of China in major global bond indices, ICMA recognised that there was a need to focus more closely on the trends, opportunities, and challenges related to the internationalization of the China corporate bond market, both from an onshore and offshore perspective.
1 https://www.icmagroup.org/assets/documents/About-ICMA/APAC/ICMA-APAC-Cross-Border-Corporate-Bond-Secondary-Market-Report-300818.pdf
Scope and methodology
The report applies a triangulation approach, utilising relevant data and analysis where available as well as qualitative input from market stakeholders. The quantitative data is taken from a variety of sources, most notably Bloomberg and Wind. The qualitative input was obtained through a series of semi-structured interviews with relevant institutions, including regional sell-sides, buy-sides, trading venues, and market infrastructures (a list of participating institutions is provided in the acknowledgements). Initial interviews were conducted in September 2019, with a second series of interviews in October and November 2020.
In terms of scope, the research focuses firstly on the domestic CNY credit bond market (see Annex I), including both financial and non-financial corporate issuers, and the extent to which this is becoming more accessible and interesting to the international investor community. It then turns its attention to the offshore China corporate bond market, primarily USD denominated, and its prominence as part of the cross-border APAC credit market.
Introduction
https://www.icmagroup.org/assets/documents/About-ICMA/APAC/ICMA-APAC-Cross-Border-Corporate-Bond-Secondary-Market-Report-300818.pdf
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 7
Market size
China’s onshore bond market, at approximately $15trillion2 equivalent of outstandings (See Figure 1), is the second largest in the world, after the US. The market can largely be divided between rates, which consist of government bonds, local government bonds, policy bank bonds3 and central bank bills, and credit, which includes corporate bonds, enterprise bonds, financial bonds, debt financing instruments (DFI), asset back securities, and other non-public bonds. [See Annex 1 for all bond types.]
Figure 1: China onshore bond market size since 2010
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind data (November 2020)4
Based on Wind data,5 ICMA estimates the overall size of the outstanding onshore credit bond market as of November 2020 to be approximately valued at $5.8trillion (CNY 38trillion), of which $3.7trillion (CNY 24trillion) are non-financial corporates (NFCs) and $2.1trillion (CNY 14trillion) are financial bonds (see Figure 2). In terms of domestic corporate bond markets, this places China in second place behind the US ($10trillion) and well ahead of the largest European and Asian markets. By currency, it is the third largest credit market after USD ($15trillion) and EUR ($7trillion).
Yet while foreign investors take up some 3% of the total market and continue to increase holdings of government and policy bank bonds, it is estimated that overseas holdings of corporate bonds constitute less than 1% of the market.
2 as of Nov 2020, Wind data.3 Policy bank bonds are those issued by the China Development Bank, the Agricultural Development Bank of China, and the Export-Import Bank of China.4 2020Q4 data in all figures in publication cover data till the end of November 2020.5 Based on the nominal value of outstanding credit bonds.
The onshore corporate bond market
Cumulative Onshore Bond Market Sizesince 2010
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The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 8
Figure 2: Outstanding China onshore credit bond market (USD equivalent) by sector
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind data (November 2020)
China’s onshore credit bond market remained relatively undeveloped until 2014-15 from where it has seen steady growth, before accelerating in terms of new issuance and outstandings from late 2018 and continuing through 2020 (see Figures 3 and 4). Previously, indirect financing such as loans had been the main form of debt financing. But in recent years there has been a concerted move to market financing, not only for state and governmental institutions, but also corporates and financials. By the end of 2018, the ratio of outstanding bonds to loans was at 63%, compared with 36% at the end of 2007.6 A key development for the corporate bond market came in 2015 when the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) allowed for non-listed corporates to issue corporate bonds7 (previously issuers of corporate bonds had to have been listed). This was largely aimed at reducing the interlinkages of state-owned banks and state-owned enterprises (SOEs). Over the ensuing five years the outstanding amount of corporate bonds grew by approximately tenfold.
Much of the growth in issuance in 2020 has been underpinned by government support for SMEs through the introduction of the new fast-track regulatory process for issuing ‘virus prevention and control bonds’, as well as regulatory pressure on state-owned banks to buy these bonds.
6 Investing in China’s Interbank Bond Market: A Handbook, NAFMII and ICMA (pending).7 Corporate bond here refers to the specific type of bond regulated by CSRC.
Materials$224.2
Communications$6.3
Technology$58.8 Consumer
staples$34.3
Consumer discretionary
$133.7
Energy$225.2
Financials$2,113.1
Utilities$342.1
Industrials$2,318.8
Real estate$324.6
not speci�ed$34.9
Health care$27.8
Total outstandings: USD 5,844billion
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 9
Figure 3: Onshore credit bond issuance since 2010
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind data (November 2020)
Figure 4: Cumulative onshore credit bond issuance since 2010
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind data (November 2020)
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The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 10
Regulatory framework for accessing the onshore bond market
There are three main routes via which the international investor community can access the China onshore bond market: (i) QFII/RQFII; (ii) CIBM Direct; and (iii) Bond Connect. Interviewees highlight the pros and cons of each of these, and some suggest that ideally there should be one single point of entry for foreign investors. While the majority of bonds are traded in the interbank market (some 90%), many credit bonds are listed and traded on the two exchanges, the Shanghai Stock Exchange (SSE) and the Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE), ensuring that the QFII/RQFII access routes have retained importance. However, ongoing initiatives to make the QFII/RQFII regime less operationally burdensome, as well as to connect the exchange and interbank markets, are intended to open the overall bond market further to foreign investors and can only be helpful in providing global access to the China credit bond market.
QFII/RQFII
In 2002, the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) and the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) jointly issued the Provisional Measures on Administration of Domestic Securities Investment of Qualified Foreign Institutional Investors, initiating the pilot QFII scheme, allowing foreign investors to enter China’s capital market directly. Over time, the QFII Rules were revised to diversify the types of institutions from those in the pilot scheme and to relax restrictions on the scope of investments. The scope of Qualified Foreign Institutional Investors (QFIIs) has been expanded to include asset management companies, insurance companies, securities firms, commercial banks, and others such as pension funds, charity foundations, endowment funds, and sovereign wealth funds.
QFIIs also need to register with the State Administration for Foreign Exchange (SAFE) and are subject to an investment quota (in USD) based on the investor’s total assets under management. After bringing their USD onshore, QFIIs can convert this to CNY and trade in exchange traded products (such as equities and bonds), or invest in the interbank bond market (after registering with the PBoC).
In 2011, the Renminbi Qualified Institutional Investor (RQFII) scheme was initiated. This allows the use of offshore CNY funds (CNH) raised offshore by the subsidiaries of domestic fund management companies and securities companies in Hong Kong to invest in the domestic securities market. Similar to the QFII scheme, investors apply for approval from the CSRC and register with SAFE. RQFIIs are also subject to a quota, but based on CNY.
Recently there have been a number of initiatives to open up the QFII/RQFII programs, including the removal of lock-up periods, allowing hedging of foreign exchange for QFIIs, and increasing the quota (from $150million to $300million). SAFE announced in September 2019 that it would repeal the QFII/RQFII investment quotas. In May 2020, the PBoC and SAFE officially removed the investment quotas and relaxed custodian management, including the possibility for multiple custodians.
Further expansion of the QFII/RQFII programs is outlined in the new rules released in September 2020, and includes: (i) consolidating the QFII and RQFII programs; (ii) streamlining the application process; (iii) broadening the scope of accessible investments (including fixed income repo and financial futures and options).
Since their introduction, over 500 institutional investors, from 30 countries/regions, have used the QFII/RQFII programs to access the onshore market.
CIBM Direct
In 2010, the China Interbank Bond Market Direct scheme was introduced, allowing international investors access to the Chinese interbank bond market (both rates and credit bonds). Similar to the QFII scheme, over time it has evolved to provide access for a range of investors (commercial banks, asset managers, insurers, securities houses, pension funds, charitable funds, and other long-term investors), and provides for three categories of investors:
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 11
• Type A can trade, settle and provide settlement agent services for interbank bond market instruments both for themselves and on behalf of Type C investors.
• Type B can trade and settle in the interbank bond market for themselves, and trade directly with others.
• Type C must appoint a Type A investor for settlement to carry out bond trading on their behalf. As of November 2020, most foreign investors are Type C.
Under the CIBM Direct scheme, investors are able to invest in all fixed income securities tradable on the CIBM (cash bond), as well as bond lending, bond forwards, interest rate forwards, interest rate swaps and FX derivatives for hedging purposes. Additionally, foreign central banks and monetary authorities, sovereign wealth funds, offshore RMB clearing banks and participating banks are allowed to do repo.
Investors are required to register with the PBoC and must appoint an onshore settlement agent. The settlement agent opens a bond account and a dedicated cash account on behalf of the investor. There are two main clearing houses: the Shanghai Clearing House (SHCH), which is used to settle medium-term notes (MTNs) and commercial paper (CP), other types of DFIs and credit risk mitigations, etc., and the China Central Depository and Clearing Company (CCDC), which is used to settle government bonds (treasury and local government bonds), central bank bills, policy bank bonds, financial bonds, enterprise bonds, asset backed securities, etc. The settlement agent will also open an account with the China Foreign Exchange Trading System (CFETS). In case an investor enters the CIBM with one single currency, the first repatriation amount cannot exceed 110%. However, there is no limit starting from the second repatriation. Offshore investors must invest within a nine-month period at least 50% of the investment amount that they mentioned in their PBoC registration filing form. The CIBM also provides access to new instruments available for hedging purpose (i.e. bond lending, bond forwards, and forward rate agreements), subject to completing legal documentation.
Recent developments aimed at making the CIBM even more accessible to international investors include the introduction of flexible settlement cycles (T+N, N≥3) for cash bond trade, a reduced minimum size for RFQs (CNY 10,000), an enhancement of the pre- and post-trade allocation process (to 50 sub-accounts), the automation of repo and securities lending, an increase in API capacity to support the full transaction lifecycle, direct RFQ service, and an extension of trading hours in the CIBM to 20:00 BJT.
By the end of November 2020 there were 467 overseas institutional investors registered though CIBM Direct.8 The same month turnover was CNY 390.3billion ($59.4billion) with net purchases of CNY 71.9 billion ($10.9billion).9
Bond Connect
In July 2017, the PBoC and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) jointly announced the launch of the Bond Connect program. Similar to the Stock Connect program (launched in 2014), Bond Connect facilitates access for international investors to the CIBM through connection between infrastructure providers in Hong Kong and the mainland China (‘northbound’). In time, Bond Connect will also provide domestic investors with access to the international bond markets (‘southbound’).
Unlike the CIBM Direct scheme, Bond Connect does not require the appointment of an onshore settlement agent. The direct settlement counterparty for offshore investors is the HKMA’s Central Moneymarkets Unit (CMU), which settles trades through accounts opened with SHCH and CCDC. International investors are able to submit electronic request for quotes (RFQs) with one or more onshore participating dealers, and are able to invest in all fixed income securities tradable on the CIBM, including treasury bonds, local government bonds, central bank papers, financial bonds, corporate credit bonds, CP, and asset-backed securities. Registered Bond Connect onshore market-makers can be accessed by investors through both the Tradeweb and Bloomberg trading terminals, with further platforms expected to be introduced in time.
8 See: http://shanghai.pbc.gov.cn/fzhshanghai/113595/4086647/index.html9 China Foreign Exchange Trade System
http://shanghai.pbc.gov.cn/fzhshanghai/113595/4086647/index.html
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 12
Other initiatives to expand the accessibility and functionality of Bond Connect include fee reductions, extended trading hours, and enhancements to Bond Connect’s primary market service offering (‘ePrime’).10
By the end of November 2020, 2,307 overseas investors11, including 75 of the world’s top 100 asset management companies, were registered with Bond Connect and 612 have started trading in the interbank market. That month total trading volumes were CNY 485billion ($73.8billion) with net purchases of CNY 51billion ($7.8billion)12.
Figure 5 illustrates the overall growth in foreign investor bond holdings in the interbank market since the launch of Bond Connect in June 2017.
Figure 5: Foreign investor bond holdings in the CIBM
Source: ICMA analysis using CCDC and SHCH data
Connecting the interbank and exchange markets
In September 2020, the PBoC and CSRC announced that they would build the Infrastructural Connection Mechanism (‘the Connect’) between the interbank and exchange markets. This pilot initiative is intended to enhance infrastructure operability and market integration, allowing access to qualified investors in either market access to both, moving closer to the realization of a single access point. In particular, this has the potential to open up international access to the credit bond market.
Tax exemption
In November 2018 the Ministry of Finance (MoF) and the State Administration of Taxation (SAT) published ‘Circular 108’ which provides foreign investors in China’s onshore bond market with an exemption from both corporate withholding tax (WHT) and value added tax (VAT) on derived interest income.13 This exemption runs from November 7, 2018 to November 6, 2021, and has provided another helpful initiative in the regulatory framework to attract international investment into the onshore bond markets.
10 Bond Connect’s ePrime service, launched in October 2020, facilitates access to offshore new issuance denominated in USD (‘Kungfu’) and CNY (‘Dimsum’)11 Bond Connect12 China Foreign Exchange Trade System13 Ordinarily income interest on bonds for international investors is charged at 10% WHT and 6% VAT
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The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 13
The economic backdrop
Participants suggest that one of the main draws to investing in China’s corporate bond markets is the strong economic backdrop. While the rate of GDP growth has slowed over the past decade, it remains on a strong upward trajectory (see Figure 6). Interviewees also note that despite the extensive lockdown imposed in early 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, this proved to be effective in containing the spread of the virus, and by the second quarter the economy was back into growth mode (see Figure 7). GDP is forecast to increase by 2% annualized in 2020 and 8.2% in 2021.14
Figure 6: China annual GDP
Source: ICMA analysis using World Bank and IMF data
14 IMF World Economic Outlook, October 2020
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https://www.imf.org/-/media/Files/Publications/WEO/2020/October/English/text.ashx
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 14
Figure 7: Quarterly GDP 2018-2020
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data
The speedy recovery of China’s economy from Q2 of 2020 is reflected in stock market prices and also the sharp recovery in government bond yields (see Figure 8).
Figure 8: China Equity and Government Bond Markets
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data
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The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 15
Returns
Interviewees also cite the relatively high nominal returns of China’s onshore bond markets, especially in comparison with more developed global bond markets where yields are close to zero or even negative, including higher rated corporate bonds. A proxy for returns from the China bond markets is provided by the Bloomberg Barclays China Aggregate Index15 (see Figures 9 and 10), while returns from the more liquid investment grade segment of the onshore credit market is provided by the Bloomberg Barclays Liquid China Credit Index16 (see Figure 11). However, interviewees also note that while nominal returns are competitive, on a relative value basis onshore credit markets are expensive, particularly when compared to the offshore market. This can be seen in the option-adjusted credit spreads in Figures 10 and 11.
Figure 9: Bloomberg Barclays China Aggregate Index value and monthly total returns
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data
15 The Bloomberg Barclays China Aggregate Index tracks the performance of the CNY-denominated fixed income market. The China Aggregate Index was launched in March 2004, with an inception date of January 1, 2004. It contains fixed-rate Treasury, government-related (including policy banks), and corporate securities that are listed on the China Interbank market. Returns are in USD, unhedged.
16 The Bloomberg Barclays Liquid China Credit Index tracks the liquid tradable portion of the CNY credit market. The index contains fixed-rate Government-related (excluding policy banks) and Corporate bonds that are listed on the Interbank Market. Bonds must have an IG rating and maturity >1 year at inclusion. Newly eligible issues are added on a quarterly basis based on past 3 months trade volume. Returns are in CNY, unhedged.
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Index
-6%
-4%
-2%
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
Emerging Markets Local Currency Government Universal Index Monthly Total Returns [RHA]
China Aggreagte Index Monthly Total Returns [RHA]
29/0
8/20
14
29/0
8/20
15
29/0
8/20
16
29/0
8/20
17
29/0
8/20
18
29/0
8/20
19
29/0
4//2
020
29/0
8/20
20
To
tal R
etur
n In
dex
Val
ue
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 16
Figure 10: Bloomberg Barclays China Aggregate Index yield and option-adjusted-spread
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data
Figure 11: Bloomberg Barclays Liquid China Credit Index
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data
While the costs of hedging currency risk can be high (participants suggest anywhere from 60bp 100bp), making relative returns less attractive, it is also noted that the CNY has remained relatively stable within a tight range for a number of years, making currency risk less of an issue for longer-term investors (see Figure 12).
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
3.5%
4.0%
4.5%
5.0%
Index Yield to Worst
0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
Index OAS to Treasury [RHA]
26/1
0/20
15
26/1
0/20
16
26/1
0/20
17
26/1
0/20
18
26/1
0/20
19
26/1
0/20
20
Bas
is p
oin
ts
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
Index
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
3.5%
4.0%
Yield [RHA]
Index OAS to Treasury [RHA]
19/1
1/20
20
30/1
0/20
20
30/0
9/20
20
31/0
8/20
20
31/0
7/20
20
30/0
6/20
20
29/0
5/20
20
30/0
4/20
20
31/0
3/20
20
28/0
2/20
20
31/0
1/20
20
31/1
2/20
19
29/1
1/20
19
31/1
0/20
19
Ind
ex V
alue
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 17
Figure 12: USD-CNY spot
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data
Global index inclusion
A major catalyst for foreign inflows into the onshore bond market since 2019, particularly passive investment flows, has been the inclusion of China in various global bond indices.
In March 2018, Bloomberg Barclays announced that domestic Chinese sovereign and policy bank bonds would be added to its Global Aggregate index (BBGA). The inclusion would be phased over a 20-month period, starting in April 2019, with CNY bonds ultimately constituting 6.5% of the $67trillion index (approximately $3trillion value). Based on the outstanding value of funds tracking the BBGA, it is estimated that this could prompt around $150billion of foreign inflows into the China bond market over the phase-in period.
In September 2019, JP Morgan announced that Chinese CNY sovereign bonds would be included in its Emerging Market Bond Index (EMBI) Global, with a ten-month phase-in from February 2020. At the end of this period China would account for 10% of the index (valued at $20trillion), giving it equal top weighting with Brazil. It is estimated that this would result in around $100billion of passive inflows.
In September 2020, FTSE Russell announced that China CNY government bonds would be included in its World Government Bond Index (WGBI) as from October 2021. China’s weighting will be 5.7% of the $21trillion valued index, slightly less than that of Germany (6%). Resulting passive inflows are estimated to be around $140billion.
Interviewees suggest that these anticipated inflows off the back of index inclusions are likely to be conservative, with some suggesting $600billion or more of passive investment flows are still to find their way into the onshore market. And while corporate bonds are not directly affected, the fact that China’s bond markets are increasingly becoming viewed as an international asset class, and as investors become more comfortable with the mechanics and risks of investing and trading in the onshore market, it would seem inevitable that it is only a matter of time before interest starts to move further along the credit curve.
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
5.5
6.0
6.5
7.0
7.5
18/1
1/20
15
18/0
5/20
16
18/1
1/20
16
18/0
5/20
17
18/1
1/20
17
18/0
5/20
18
18/1
1/20
18
18/0
5/20
19
18/1
1/20
19
18/0
5/20
20
18/1
1/20
20
High: 7.1798 (9/03/19) Low: 6.269 (4/11/18) Avg: 6.7636
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 18
Credit ratings and defaults
Interviewees cite challenges with assessing the credit quality of underlying corporates as one of the main barriers to entry to the onshore market. There are nine domestic credit rating agencies (some state-owned), which adds to the confusing landscape, but perhaps more disconcerting is the general skew to the higher end of the credit spectrum and the resulting lack of credit differentiation. This is illustrated in Figure 13, which shows that 38% of credit bonds carrying a credit rating are rated AAA, while 96% are rated AA or better.
Interviewees also note that ratings tend to remain static, and a credit can easily go straight from AA status to default.
This suggests the need for investors to dedicate time and resources to their own proprietary credit analysis. While corporate accounts and company disclosures are publicly available, local expertise is often required in sourcing such information, as well as local language skills, given that much of this is not published in English. Interviewees note that a number of banks and asset managers are already setting up onshore domestic entities with a view to being better positioned to conduct independent research and credit analysis.
A familiarity with issuers that are also active in the offshore market, and subject to international rating standards, can also help provide a point of reference in assessing onshore credit quality. However, there is broad consensus among interviewees that a critical development in the internationalization of the onshore market will be the introduction of internationally comparable credit ratings. Already two of the major international rating agencies have obtained licenses to rate bonds traded in the interbank market (S&P and Fitch). It remains to be seen, however, if the international credit rating agencies can bring significant changes to the rating regime. So far, the local subsidiaries of S&P and Fitch have produced a few ratings for issuers in the onshore market and the ratings remained consistent with the domestic rating regime.
Figure 13: Onshore credit bond market by credit rating
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind data (November 2020)
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
4,000
N/ABBBBB+BBB-BBBBBB+A-AA+AA-AAAA+AAA-AAA0
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
12000
US
D B
illio
ns
Number of issues [RHA]
Total Outstanding (USD equivalent)
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 19
Intertwined with the challenge of assessing credit quality is the incidence and outcome of corporate defaults. Prior to 2015 corporate defaults were relatively unheard of, but even as the credit market began to grow, there was still an assumption, and observation, that particularly in the case of SOEs, the government would intervene to backstop any company in difficulty. Since 2018 it has become clear that the state has taking a less interventionist stance, and while defaults remain relatively few, they are no longer the rarity they were (see Figures 14 and 15). Furthermore, defaults are broadly dispersed and not limited to any particular sector (see Figure 16).
Figure 14: Onshore credit bond defaults
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind data (November 2020)
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Cumulative (USD Equivalent)
Total (USD Equivalent)
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Issues [RHA]
US
D B
illio
ns
2020 Q
uart
er
4(t
ill e
nd
No
v)
2020 Q
uart
er
3
2020 Q
uart
er
2
2020 Q
uart
er
1
2019 Q
uart
er
4
2019 Q
uart
er
3
2019 Q
uart
er
2
2019 Q
uart
er
1
2018 Q
uart
er
4
2018 Q
uart
er
3
2018 Q
uart
er
2
2018 Q
uart
er
1
2017 Q
uart
er
4
2017 Q
uart
er
3
2017 Q
uart
er
2
2017 Q
uart
er
1
2016 Q
uart
er
4
2016 Q
uart
er
3
2016 Q
uart
er
2
2016 Q
uart
er
1
2015 Q
uart
er
4
2015 Q
uart
er
3
2015 Q
uart
er
2
2015 Q
uart
er
1
2014 Q
uart
er
4
2014 Q
uart
er
3
2014 Q
uart
er
2
2014 Q
uart
er
1
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 20
Figure 15: Onshore credit bond defaults by issuer type since 2014
Figure 16: Onshore corporate bond defaults by sector since 2014
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
US
D M
illio
ns
2020
Qua
rter
4 (t
ill e
nd N
ov)
2020
Qua
rter
3
2020
Qua
rter
2
2020
Qua
rter
1
2019
Qua
rter
4
2019
Qua
rter
3
2019
Qua
rter
2
2019
Qua
rter
1
2018
Qua
rter
4
2018
Qua
rter
3
2018
Qua
rter
2
2018
Qua
rter
1
2017
Qua
rter
4
2017
Qua
rter
3
2017
Qua
rter
2
2017
Qua
rter
1
2016
Qua
rter
4
2016
Qua
rter
3
2016
Qua
rter
2
2016
Qua
rter
1
2015
Qua
rter
4
2015
Qua
rter
3
2015
Qua
rter
2
2015
Qua
rter
1
2014
Qua
rter
4
2014
Qua
rter
3
2014
Qua
rter
2
2014
Qua
rter
1
Real estate
Consumer staples
Financials
Health care
Utilities
Materials
Technology
Consumer discretionary
Energy
Industrials
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind data (November 2020)
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
Other
Foreign companies
Sino-foreign joint ventures
Private Enterprises
Public companies
Local state-owned enterprises
Central state-owned enterprises
2020
Qua
rter
4 (t
ill e
nd N
ov)
2020
Qua
rter
3
2020
Qua
rter
2
2020
Qua
rter
1
2019
Qua
rter
4
2019
Qua
rter
3
2019
Qua
rter
2
2019
Qua
rter
1
2018
Qua
rter
4
2018
Qua
rter
3
2018
Qua
rter
2
2018
Qua
rter
1
2017
Qua
rter
4
2017
Qua
rter
3
2017
Qua
rter
2
2017
Qua
rter
1
2016
Qua
rter
4
2016
Qua
rter
3
2016
Qua
rter
2
2016
Qua
rter
1
2015
Qua
rter
4
2015
Qua
rter
3
2015
Qua
rter
2
2015
Qua
rter
1
2014
Qua
rter
4
2014
Qua
rter
3
2014
Qua
rter
2
2014
Qua
rter
1
US
D M
illio
ns
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind data (November 2020)
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 21
Interviewees point out that the increase in corporate defaults is not in itself a bad thing and is an important element of a maturing market. Firstly, it helps to promote credit differentiation and underscores the need for more thorough credit analysis and more reliable, independent rating structures. Secondly, defaults provide case studies for how Chinese bankruptcy law is applied in practice and an indication of recovery values, which also helps in the fundamental assessment of credit evaluation and pricing. Finally, increasing corporate defaults also support the argument for developing an onshore credit default swap (CDS) market as a mechanism for market stabilization and investor protection.
Secondary market liquidity
Interviewees consistently cite a lack of secondary market liquidity as a major barrier to the internationalization of the onshore credit market. This lack of liquidity is attributed to a number of factors.
Secondary market structure
Accessing the onshore credit market is not as straightforward as the rates market, particularly as it is bifurcated across the interbank and exchange markets (with financials tending to be concentrated on the former and non-financials on the latter). Interviewees explain that to have access to a broad range of onshore debt securities investors need to be connected to both the interbank and the exchange markets, noting further that many corporate bonds, particularly legacy bonds, are not registered for trading through Bond Connect. The ‘Connect’ initiative to provide interoperability between the two markets could help in this respect.
Interviewees complain of very little transparency and price visibility in the secondary credit markets, making it difficult to know where to go to find prices. They report that many Tier 1 banks limit their market-making capacity in credit to perhaps only the 20-or-so most liquid issues, with a skew towards financials. Meanwhile, less liquid issues, in particular NFCs, tend to be traded by the Tier 2 or Tier 3 banks and securities houses, and even then, interviewees note that this tends to be more in a broking capacity than as a true market-maker. Figure 17 shows traded volumes and turnover rates in the secondary market, which are relatively low compared to the size of the market.
Figure 17: China Onshore credit bond secondary market activity
Source: ICMA analysis using CDCC data
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
40,000
45,000
Amount of Custody (billion yuan)
Transaction Amount(billion yuan)
CN
Y B
illio
ns
0.0%
0.1%
0.2%
0.3%
0.4%
0.5%
0.6%
0.7%
0.8%
Turnover Rate [RHA]
2020Q32020Q22020Q12019Q4
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 22
It is suggested that the distribution of credit bond holders does not help. New issues tend to get soaked up by commercial banks, or private wealth managers, where they are often held to maturity. In the case of commercial banks, who also tend to be the largest market-makers, given that these bonds sit with the banks’ treasuries, rather than in the securities trading division, they rarely find their way back into the secondary market. As China’s institutional investor base continues to diversify, particularly with the development of onshore corporate bond index funds and ETFs targeted at asset managers, this should help to improve secondary market liquidity. More overseas participation can only be a further plus. And while there is a reticence to provide easy access for international hedge funds, interviewees note that they serve a useful auxiliary role in creating two-way flows which helps to create liquidity.
Issue sizes and maturity profiles of the credit market are also identified as impacting liquidity. Issue sizes tend to be small by international standards: ICMA, using Wind data, estimates the weighted average issue size of credit bonds to be CNY 1.1billion or $167million equivalent. In terms of distribution, the majority of issues tend to be at the smaller end of the spectrum (see Figure 18). Fewer, larger issues, would most likely help to enhance liquidity.
Figure 18: Onshore corporate bond market issue sizes
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind data (November 2020)
Maturity profiles also play an important factor. Average maturities tend to be relatively short. Using Wind data, ICMA estimates the average weighted maturity of the outstanding credit market at issuance to be 5.4 years, with a current average weighted remaining term to maturity of 3.4 years. Furthermore, longer maturities tend to be dominated by financials (see Figure 19). Longer maturities not only tend to be more attractive to longer-term investors such as pension funds and insurance companies, but a credit market with a longer maturity profile reduces issuer refinancing risk, making the market less vulnerable to short-term credit or liquidity shocks.
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
≥ CNY 10bnCNY 5bn-10bnCNY 4bn-5bnCNY 3bn-4bnCNY 2bn-3bnCNY 1bn-2bn
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 23
Figure 19: Onshore corporate bond market maturity profile
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind data (December 2020)
Hedging and funding markets
Interviewees highlight the lack of developed hedging and financing markets, particularly for credit, as being a major impediment to market liquidity, noting that both are not only important risk and liquidity management tools for investors, but they are also required to enable market-makers to provide liquidity.
In the case of repo, access is relatively limited, with only foreign central banks, international financial institutions, sovereign wealth funds, offshore RMB clearing banks and participating banks able to access the market through CIBM Direct. Furthermore, the onshore repo market is largely based on pledge structures, with no title transfer, which limits the scope for a ‘specials market’ and the ability to short-sell. Interviewees suggest that while there are ways to circumnavigate this in the rates market, there is essential no real credit repo market. Without the ability to take short positions, market-makers are limited in their scope to provide offers, forcing them to act more as principal brokers.
Avenues for foreign investors to hedge interest rate risk are also relatively limited. CNY interest rate swaps (IRS) have existed for more than a decade and can be traded through CIBM Direct. However, interviewees report that daily volumes remain relatively thin, while others express concern that international standard ISDA documentation is not accepted by domestic institutions. Shorting government bonds to hedge interest rate risk can be difficult, given the lack of a title transfer repo specials market.
Meanwhile, access to the recently relaunched onshore CGB futures market17 is limited to only the largest domestic commercial banks, with the piloted introduction of further large commercial banks and insurance institutions. In 2017, HKEX introduced a cash-settled five-year China Ministry of Finance Treasury Bond contract,18 however this was soon after discontinued for regulatory reasons. Interviewees highlight the importance of international investors having ready access either to the onshore futures market, or via the reintroduction of an offshore market, as critical in the internationalization of the onshore bond market.
17 2,5, and 10-year CGB contracts are available on the China Financial Futures Exchange (CFFE).18 See: https://www.hkex.com.hk/-/media/HKEX-Market/Products/Listed-Derivatives/Interest-Rate/MOF-T-Bond-Futures_b/MOF-T-Bond-Futures-Infosheet/MOF_FUT_Mar17_E.pdf
0
300
600
900
1,200
1,500
2062
2058
2057
2050
2049
2048
2047
2046
2045
2044
2043
2042
2041
2040
2039
2038
2037
2036
2035
2034
2033
2032
2031
2030
2029
2028
2027
2026
2025
2024
2023
2022
2021
2020
Avg wtd original maturity: 5.4yrs
Avg wtd remaining maturity: 3.4yrs
US
D b
illio
ns
Utilities
Industrials
Real estate
Communications
Materials
not speci�ed
Financials
Consumer discretionary
Energy
Consumer staples
Technology
Health care
https://www.hkex.com.hk/-/media/HKEX-Market/Products/Listed-Derivatives/Interest-Rate/MOF-T-Bond-Futures_b/MOF-T-Bond-Futures-Infosheet/MOF_FUT_Mar17_E.pdf
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 24
The ability to hedge credit risk, which is seen as fundamental to opening up the onshore credit market, presents even more challenges. China has resisted the development of a single name (SN) CDS market, instead introducing its own onshore credit risk management instruments: the Credit Risk Mitigation Agreement (CRMA) and Credit Risk Mitigation Warrant (CRMW). The former is a bilateral agreement between parties, while the latter is a freely traded security. Both instruments, however, only provide protection on a specific bond or loan, rather than on a particular credit or class of debt. While interest in protection against defaults has increased in recent years, interviewees point to the lack of uptake in these instruments, explaining that the one-way nature of the underlying market (i.e. long) means that there is very little incentive for anyone ever to sell protection, while the fact that they are referenced to specific bonds provides very little flexibility as a generic hedging instrument. Again, they suggest that the development of a SN-CDS market, based on international structures and standards, will help to underpin liquidity.
Panda bond market
In the same way that onshore Chinese corporations becoming regular issuers in the international market can help to foster investor confidence in the onshore market (see next section), so overseas issuers accessing the onshore market can bring more international attention. The so-called ‘Panda bond’ market (CNY issuance by non-Chinese issuers) has grown in traction over the past few years, bringing in a range of international sovereign, supranational, and corporate issuers, either looking to fund CNY liabilities or to diversify their funding sources. While this remains a relatively small segment of the overall onshore market (See Figure 20) it can be viewed as an important trend in the internationalization of the market. Furthermore, while financial issuers (primarily global banks) dominate the market, non-financial corporates form a significant part of the market, with household names such as BMW and Daimler (see Figure 21).
Figure 20: Panda bond market outstandings by issuer type
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (January 2021)
Government $3,944,078,560
11%
Non-�nancial corporates
$18,549,853,770 52%
Total outstandings: $35billion
Financials $13,343,659,690
37%
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 25
Figure 21: Panda corporate bond market outstandings by issuer country of risk
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (January 2021)
Total outstandings: $32billion
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
Consumer Discretionary
Consumer Staples
Energy
Financials
Health Care
Industrials
Materials
Technology
Utilities
OthersDENLFRBMKYHK
US
D M
illio
ns
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 26
Market size
Since 2010, China has come from virtually nowhere to dominating the Asia-Pacific international corporate bond market.19 Based on Bloomberg data, ICMA estimates the size of the offshore China corporate bond market to be approximately $752billion equivalent nominal outstanding,20 or around 30% of the total APAC international corporate bond market (see Figure 22), and 38% of APAC international USD issuance (see Figure 23).21
Figure 22: APAC international corporate bond market outstandings by country of risk
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
19 See: ICMA (2018), The Asia-Pacific Cross-Border Corporate Bond Secondary Market.20 Based on the nominal value of outstanding bonds issued offshore by Chinese (country of risk) non-governmental corporations, issued in all currencies, and with maturities at time of issuance greater than
one year.21 92% of China’s offshore corporate bond issuance is denominated in USD (with 4% Euro, 2% HKD, 1% AUD, and 1% others).
The offshore corporate bond market
ID $108,698,690,991
4%
SG $119,301,184,203
5%
AU $549,638,363,201
22%
JP $376,880,981,880
15%
CN $752,259,995,033
30%
HK $112,330,419,015
5%
OTHER $278,266,710,933
11% MY $188,925,918,821
8%
Total: $2,586million equivalent
https://www.icmagroup.org/assets/documents/About-ICMA/APAC/ICMA-APAC-Cross-Border-Corporate-Bond-Secondary-Market-Report-300818.pdf
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 27
Figure 23: APAC international USD corporate bond market outstandings by country of risk
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
In terms of total issuance since 2010, Chinese corporates account for over 40% of the APAC USD corporate bond market (see Figure 24) and as of November 2020, China accounted for 52% of 2020 new issuance in USD (see Figure 25).
Figure 24: Cumulative APAC USD corporate bond issuance by country of risk since 2010
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
SOUTH KOREA $64,055,906,056
3%
INDIA$101,760,757,950
5%
JAPAN $281,223,854,950
15%
HONG KONG$82,402,404,976
4%
AUSTRALIA $265,519,811,261
14%
INDONESIA $104,898,547,352
6%
OTHER $211,065,040,628
11%
CHINA $711,859,348,009
38%
Total: $1,890million
SINGAPORE $67,276,287,387
4%
0
500,000
1,000,000
1,500,000
2,000,000
Others
IN
ID
SG
HK
KR
JP
CN
AU
US
D M
illio
ns
2020
Qua
rter 3
2020
Qua
rter 1
2019
Qua
rter 3
2019
Qua
rter 1
2018
Qua
rter 3
2018
Qua
rter 1
2017
Qua
rter 3
2017
Qua
rter 1
2016
Qua
rter 3
2016
Qua
rter 1
2015
Qua
rter 3
2015
Qua
rter 1
2014
Qua
rter 3
2014
Qua
rter 1
2013
Qua
rter 3
2013
Qua
rter 1
2012
Qua
rter 3
2012
Qua
rter 1
2011
Qua
rter 3
2011
Qua
rter 1
2010
Qua
rter 3
2010
Qua
rter 1
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 28
Figure 25: APAC USD corporate bond new issuance
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (January 2021)
Comparing the offshore China credit market with the onshore market, the onshore market is almost eight-times larger, as illustrated in Figure 26.
Figure 26: Size of China onshore and offshore credit markets (USD equivalent outstandings)
Source: ICMA analysis using Wind and Bloomberg data
0
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
140,000
Others
ID
IN
SG
HK
KR
AU
JP
CN
US
D M
illio
ns
2021
Qua
rter 1
2020
Qua
rter 3
2020
Qua
rter 1
2019
Qua
rter 3
2019
Qua
rter 1
2018
Qua
rter 3
2018
Qua
rter 1
2017
Qua
rter 3
2017
Qua
rter 1
2016
Qua
rter 3
2016
Qua
rter 1
2015
Qua
rter 3
2015
Qua
rter 1
2014
Qua
rter 3
2014
Qua
rter 1
2013
Qua
rter 3
2013
Qua
rter 1
2012
Qua
rter 3
2012
Qua
rter 1
2011
Qua
rter 3
2011
Qua
rter 1
2010
Qua
rter 3
2010
Qua
rter 1
Onshore Fins $2,113
32%
Offshore Fins$3716%
Onshore NFCs $3,731
56%
USD(billions) equivalent outstandings (November 2020)
Offshore NFCs$3816%
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 29
Sector analysis
Unlike the onshore corporate bond market, the offshore market is heavily skewed to financials (50% of outstanding nominal value), and predominantly real estate financing (45% of financials), with banks and other financials making up most of the remainder (see Figure 28). Among non-financial corporate issuers, energy, industrials, utilities and communications constitute approximately 75% of outstandings.
Figure 27: China offshore corporate bond market by sector
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
Figure 28: China offshore corporate bond market: financials
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
Financials375,164,032,433
50%
Total outstanding: $752million
Utilities$65,337,592,000
9%
Industrials $50,414,922,678
7%
Consumer Discretionary $47,088,511,783
6%
Energy $93,998,348,181
12%
Communications $63,952,412,500
9%
Consumer Staples $6,866,218,900
1%Health Care
$2,415,873,000 0%
Materials $28,302,113,334
4%
Technology $18,719,970,225
2%
Property & Casualty Insurance $2,946,009,000
1%
Total outstanding: $371million
Commercial Finance $26,840,291,789
7%
Financial Services $73,411,506,154
20%
Consumer Finance $819,000,000
0%
Banks $96,840,181,375
26%Real Estate
$165,500,450,84845%
Life Insurance $3,900,000,000
1%Government Development Banks $1,000,000,000
0%
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 30
Market structure
Issuance
Much of the impetus for Chinese corporates to tap the international debt markets is the result of China’s rapid global economic expansion, and the need to fund overseas investment and acquisitions, primarily in USD. Furthermore, it is suggested that while in many cases Chinese corporates could fund themselves through the onshore market, potentially at better levels, there has been a big push in recent years, particularly at the local government level, for Chinese credits to establish themselves as familiar names in the international market.
However, interviewees suggest that while China financials and corporates dominate the APAC international credit market, one of the biggest challenges is the lack of supply of Chinese names to meet demand. This is partly attributed to a requirement by China’s National Development and Reform Commission, introduced in May 2018, for onshore enterprises to conform to stricter standards when engaging in foreign debt financings.22 These new stipulations were more specifically aimed at reducing levels of corporate and institutional leverage, particularly with respect to local government funding vehicles (LGFVs) which had become more prominent in the offshore market since 2016.
Figure 29: China offshore corporate bond new issuance
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
Interviewees further suggest that supply is often restricted by syndicate managers (usually Chinese banks), and where otherwise demand could support significantly larger new issues without any material change in pricing. They note that while there has been an increase in jumbo issues in recent years (particularly by more internationally recognized names) issue sizes tend to be at the smaller end of the spectrum, which also constrains liquidity in the secondary market (see Figure 30).
22 NDRC Circular 2044 (May 11, 2018)
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
80,000
US
D M
illio
ns
Materials
Technology
Consumer staples
Health care
Communications
Utilities
Consumer discretionary
Energy
Industrials
Financials
2020
Qua
rter
420
20 Q
uart
er 3
2020
Qua
rter
220
20 Q
uart
er 1
2019
Qua
rter
420
19 Q
uart
er 3
2019
Qua
rter
220
19 Q
uart
er 1
2018
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rter
420
18 Q
uart
er 3
2018
Qua
rter
220
18 Q
uart
er 1
2017
Qua
rter
420
17 Q
uart
er 3
2017
Qua
rter
220
17 Q
uart
er 1
2016
Qua
rter
420
16 Q
uart
er 3
2016
Qua
rter
220
16 Q
uart
er 1
2015
Qua
rter
420
15 Q
uart
er 3
2015
Qua
rter
220
15 Q
uart
er 1
2014
Qua
rter
420
14 Q
uart
er 3
2014
Qua
rter
220
14 Q
uart
er 1
2013
Qua
rter
420
13 Q
uart
er 3
2013
Qua
rter
220
13 Q
uart
er 1
2012
Qua
rter
420
12 Q
uart
er 3
2012
Qua
rter
220
12 Q
uart
er 1
2011
Qua
rter
420
11 Q
uart
er 3
2011
Qua
rter
220
11 Q
uart
er 1
2010
Qua
rter
420
10 Q
uart
er 3
2010
Qua
rter
2
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 31
Figure 30: China offshore corporate bond market by issue size (outstandings)
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
Investors
Interviewees suggest that initially as the international market began to grow, investors were almost exclusively the offshore entities of Chinese investment firms, securities houses, and private banks looking to invest their USD. These investors were familiar with the names coming to market and comfortable with the more conservative international credit ratings. However, this investor base appears to be diversifying in recent years, with more regional and global asset managers looking to diversify their portfolios while seeking out higher returns. Importantly, as Chinese names become a familiar feature of the APAC credit space, so international investors are likely to feel more comfortable venturing into the significantly larger onshore market.
However, interviewees point to structural barriers for many international investors, including a lack of international credit ratings for many issuers (see Figure 31), as well as a heavy concentration toward very short maturities (see Figure 32).
0
100,000
200,000
300,000
400,000
500,000
600,000
700,000
Nominal (USD equivalent)
$4bn-$5bn$3bn-$4bn$2bn-$3bn$1bn-$2bn$100mm-$1bn
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 32
Figure 31: China offshore corporate bond market by credit rating (outstandings)
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
Figure 32: China offshore corporate bond market by maturity profile (outstandings)
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
Secondary market liquidity
Interviewees paint a mixed picture of liquidity in the offshore China corporate bond market. This is against a backdrop of an international APAC credit market where participants already report challenged secondary market liquidity that is intrinsically skewed toward the bid side of the market. It is noted that secondary liquidity for Chinese credits is largely provided by the offshore (invariably Hong Kong based) entities of onshore banks and securities houses, and that this is an extremely competitive market where turnover appears to be more of a priority for dealers than profitability.
Otherwise, interviewees point to smaller issue sizes, the propensity for Chinese investors to hold to maturity, the lack of a developed SN-CDS market, and patchy repo availability as significant constraints on secondary market liquidity. That said, several suggest that liquidity in the offshore credit market is comparably better to that in the onshore market.
0
50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
300,000
Outstanding nominal value (USD equivalent)
N/ADD+CCCC+B-BB+BB-BBBB+BBB-BBBBBB+A-AA+AA-AAAAA 0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
Issues [RHA]
Avg issue size: $441.1million
US
D M
illio
ns
Num
ber o
f issues
Avg remaining maturity: 2.9yrs
0
50,000
100,000
150,000
200,000
250,000
300,000
US
D M
illio
ns
Communications
Technology
Consumer staples
Health care
Materials
Energy
Utilities
Consumer discretionary
Industrials
Financials
Per
p20
7720
6020
5720
5120
5020
4920
4820
4720
4620
4520
4420
4320
4220
4120
4020
3920
3820
3720
3620
3520
3420
3320
3220
3120
3020
2920
2820
2720
2620
2520
2420
2320
2220
21
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 33
Valuations
Interviewees suggest that apart from better liquidity, ease of access, and less opacity with respect to price formation and credit analysis, the offshore China credit market offers better value to investors. Despite a heavy demand-supply imbalance, valuations are more fundamentally driven and pricing less disparate. It is reported that comparing similar names in the onshore and offshore markets can often provide significant discrepancies in terms of spread valuations, and that these can be as much as 100-200bp at the high yield end of the credit spectrum. However, some argue that Chinese investors tend to be more focused on absolute returns, rather than relative value, which can often result in anomalous price behaviour, such as credit spreads tightening when the rates markets sell-off.
Perhaps not surprisingly, pricing in the offshore market also shows less resilience than the onshore market in response to adverse macroeconomic shocks, as was highlighted by the COVID-19 turbulence in the first half of 2020 (for example, compare Figures 10 and 11 with 33 and 34).
However, in line with credit markets globally, and largely in response to Federal Reserve and other central bank monetary stimulus, the China offshore credit market has recovered well, and quickly, with spreads back to pre-COVID levels (see Figure 34), and outright yields broadly lower than at the start of 2020 (see Figures 35 and 36).
Figure 33: China corporate bond USD 5-year yields (BVAL)23
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
23 The Bloomberg China USD BVAL curves are populated with USD denominated senior unsecured fixed rate bonds issued by Chinese financial and non-financial companies, grouped by the relevant Bloomberg composite ratings. In this case bons with maturities of close to 5 years.
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
3.5%
Fin BBB+, BBB, BBB-
Fin A+, A, A-
Non-Fin A+, A, A-
Non-Fin BBB+, BBB, BBB-
19/1
1/2
019
19/1
2/2
019
19/0
1/2
020
19/0
2/2
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020
19/0
8/2
020
19/0
9/2
020
19/1
0/2
020
17/1
1/2
020
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 34
Figure 34: China corporate bond USD 5-year swap spreads (BVAL)
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
Figure 35: China USD non-financial IG corporate bond yield curve (BVAL)24
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
24 The Bloomberg China USD non-financial BVAL curves are populated with USD denominated senior unsecured fixed rate bonds issued by Chinese non-financial companies, grouped by the relevant Bloomberg composite ratings.
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
3.5%
Fin BBB+, BBB, BBB-
Fin A+, A, A-
Non-Fin A+, A, A-
Non-Fin BBB+, BBB, BBB-
19/1
1/2
019
19/1
2/2
019
19/0
1/2
020
19/0
2/2
020
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3/2
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020
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020
17/1
1/2
020
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
3.5%
4.0%
02/01/2020
24/03/2020
17/11/2020
30Y25Y20Y15Y12Y10Y9Y8Y7Y6Y5Y4Y3Y2Y1Y6M3M
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 35
Figure 36: China USD non-financial cross-over corporate bond yield curve (BVAL)
Source: ICMA analysis using Bloomberg data (November 2020)
0.0%
0.5%
1.0%
1.5%
2.0%
2.5%
3.0%
3.5%
4.0%
4.5%
5.0%
5.5%
02/01/2020
24/03/2020
17/11/2020
10Y9Y8Y7Y6Y5Y4Y3Y2Y1Y6M3M
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 36
Conclusion
Over the past ten years, Chinese financial and non-financial corporates have become a familiar, and dominant, feature of the APAC cross-border credit market, particularly the USD segment of this market. Chinese issuance of hard currency bonds has been key in supporting China’s global economic expansion, and while investors in these bonds have predominantly been the offshore entities of Chinese investment firms, securities houses, and private banks, Chinese credits have become an important source of diversification for regional and global emerging market portfolios, offering competitive and consistent outright and relative returns.
Meanwhile, the significantly larger onshore China credit market remains relatively untapped by foreign investors. Over the past five years China has introduced a stream of regulatory and infrastructure initiatives to improve global access to its onshore bond markets and to attract international investment. China’s inclusion in global indices had added impetus to foreign inflows, which look set to increase, particularly with more market-friendly policies in the pipeline. However, to date the internationalization of China’s onshore bond markets has remained relatively modest, and almost exclusively concentrated at the sovereign and quasi-sovereign (i.e. ‘rates’) end of the credit spectrum.
Barriers to the $5.8trillion credit market for international investors appear to be multiple: bifurcated liquidity across exchange and interbank markets; a fragmented landscape of market-makers; small infrequently traded issues that rarely come back into the market; a lack of supply of longer maturities; concerns around market transparency and opacity of price formation; challenges with credit analysis; uncertainty around bankruptcy law and recovery values; and the absence of both a credit repo specials market and a SN-CDS market. While many of these challenges are likely to persist in the short-term, they are not insurmountable, and as international investors and investment firms become more comfortable investing and operating in the rates segment of the onshore, so it would seem inevitable that in time they will begin to look further along the credit curve. The potential for transforming the China onshore credit market into a truly global market is significant.
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 37
Categories Bond types
Rates Treasury bonds (government bonds)
Local government bonds
Central bank bills
Policy bank bonds
Credit bonds Financial bonds
Enterprise bonds
Corporate bonds
Medium Term Notes (MTN)
Short-term Commercial Paper (CP)
Private Placement Notes
International institution bonds
Government-sponsored organisation bonds
Asset-backed securities
Convertible bonds
Exchangeable bonds
Standardised bills
Annex I China onshore bond types
The Internationalization of the China Corporate Bond Market 38
Annex II Bibliography
Aberdeen Standard Investments, 2018, China’s Bond market: ‘What and Why and When…’
ADB, 2020, The Inter-Bank Bond Market in the People’s Republic of China
Alliance Bernstein, 2019, China Credit: A Guide to Investing in the Onshore Market
ASIFMA, 2019, China’s Capital Markets: The Pace of Change Accelerates
Colombia Threadneedle Investments, 2019, China Onshore Bonds Enter the Mainstream
DBS, 2020, China’s onshore bond and FX markets: A primer for foreign investors
Fitch Ratings, 2019, China Corporate Bond Market Blue Book
FTSE Russell, FTSE Russell China Bond Research Report (November 2020)
HSBC Global Asset Management, 2019, The dragon enters: Inclusion of onshore China bonds in Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index
ICMA 2020, China: connecting interbank and exchange bond market infrastructures; ICMA Quarterly Report, Q4 2020 Issue 59, Article by CSDC, pp. 44-45
ICMA, 2018, The Asia-Pacific Cross-Border Corporate Bond Secondary Market
ICMA and NAFMII, 2017, The Panda Bond Market and Perspectives of Foreign Issuers
ICMA and NAFMII, 2015, Practices and procedures in the Chinese and international primary debt capital markets
IMF, 2019, The Future of China’s Bond Market
Invesco, 2019, Chinese onshore bonds: A market too important to ignore?
Neuberger Berman, 2018, Welcome to the Real China Bond Market
PWC, 2018, China announces a three-year tax exemption on bond interest for foreign investors
Schroders, 2020, Are Chinese corporate bonds presenting opportunities following the Covid-19 sell off?
Seafarer, 2019, The Evolution of China’s Bond Market
State Street Global Advisors, 2018, Opening of China’s Bond Markets: What Global Investors Need to Know
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