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Chen Yuan (C), president of China Development Bank (CDB), presides over a ceremony of issuing Renminbi bonds in Hong Kong, China, on June 26, 2007. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
HONG KONG, June 26 (Xinhua) -- China Development Bank
(CDB) announced Tuesday that it will issue five billion yuan (about 657 million
U.S. dollars) RMB bond in Hong Kong, which is the first Chinese currency bond to
be launched outside the Chinese mainland.
The two-year bond, which will
be synchronously sold to institutions and individual investors from June 27 to
July 6, yields three percent annually. The return is relatively high compared to
the 0.7 percent interest rate for six-month deposit here, with the anticipation
of RMB appreciation.
The minimum subscription for an individual investor
is 20,000 yuan, and at least one billion yuan of the bond is targeting at retail
investors.
The joint lead managers and book runners for the bond
issue are Bank of China (Hong Kong) and the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking
Corporation Limited. The distributors comprise of 14 placing banks with branches
in Hong Kong, including Bank of Communications, China Construction Bank (Asia),
Dah Sing Bank, and The Bank of East Asia.
The bond did not apply for independent ratings. CDB
Governor Chen Yuan explained that despite the bank's on-going market-oriented
reform, CDB will adhere to its mission of helping to achieve the government's
goals, and "our debt rating will also remain intact."
CDB is China's largest policy bank and solely owned
by the Ministry of Finance. It has been raising capital by issuing bonds since
1998, and has been given sovereign ratings by Moody's, Standard and Poor's and
Fitch Ratings.
Analysts say both Hong Kong and the mainland could
benefit from floating RMB outside the mainland.
"The issuance of RMB bonds here will strengthen Hong
Kong's status as an international financial center," Ma Delun, assistant
governor of the People's Bank of China, said at the launch ceremony of the bond.
The issuance of renminbi bonds in Hong Kong signifies
the city's role as the country's premier international finance center, giving
local investors more choice, said Henry Tang, financial secretary of the Hong
Kong Special Administrative Region government, when addressing the ceremony.
"The arrangement is a fresh step in Hong
Kong-Mainland co-operation," he said.
Noting the renminbi is the fourth currency to go on
the Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) System, Tang said this will facilitate the
trading or the liquidity of the renminbi bond.
"Although the total amount of renminbi in Hong Kong
is not very large, about 25 billion HK dollars, I think that with further
co-operation and integration between Hong Kong and the Mainland in terms of
financial and monetary instruments, the pool can only grow," he said.
Tang said there is no plan to list renminbi bonds on
the Hong Kong Stock Exchange because many of the brokers are not on the RTGS
system.
He said if more companies can go on the RTGS system
on the approval of Mainland authorities for renminbi transactions, then there
will be better liquidity so it can be listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
Joseph Yam, chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary
Authority, said he believed that RMB businesses in the bond market may pave the
way for similar businesses in Hong Kong's soaring stock market.
"In Hong Kong, a free capital market, the price of
RMB bonds will fully mirror international investors' expectations of RMB's
revaluation, which is of reference value for the foreign-exchange reform of the
Chinese currency," said Yang Tao, a researcher with the Institute of Finance and
Banking of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
Besides, the floating of RMB bonds outside the
mainland will give China more say in pricing RMB derivatives, he said.