Key facts
- China's Ministry of Finance sold 15 billion yuan ($2.2 billion) in sovereign bonds in Hong Kong.
- The sale included a record low coupon rate of 1.29% on 4.5 billion yuan of two-year debt.
- The offering was 3.86 times subscribed, indicating strong investor demand.
- A larger 15.5 billion yuan sale is planned for April 22.
- Foreign investors injected $2.5 billion into Chinese debt in March.
China's recent and planned offshore yuan bond sales in Hong Kong are contributing to a tightening of liquidity in the city, pushing funding costs higher. The Ministry of Finance sold 15 billion yuan ($2.2 billion) of sovereign notes, including a record low-coupon two-year tranche, which was heavily oversubscribed. This issuance, alongside a larger 15.5 billion yuan sale planned for April 22, aims to bolster the yuan and reinforce Hong Kong's role as an offshore renminbi hub.
Global investors are increasingly looking to Chinese debt for stability amid geopolitical tensions and inflation fears elsewhere. In March, foreign investors injected approximately $2.5 billion into Chinese bonds, a stark contrast to outflows from other emerging markets. This divergence is attributed to China's lower inflation, supportive monetary policy, and a yield curve distinct from those in the US and Europe.
The People's Bank of China has also intervened by issuing 50 billion yuan of central bank bills to curb speculative pressure on the yuan and stabilize its exchange rate. This strategy aims to reduce offshore liquidity and deter short-selling.
