The DIY approach to China bond investing
Lack of international ratings means foreign investors will need research resources of their own
Most bond index providers have started to acknowledge China’s efforts to open up its financial markets, and it is only a matter of time before the nation’s debt is included in global benchmarks. That brings with it an opportunity and a big challenge for investors.
All of which means now is the right moment for money managers to put together the building blocks to be successful in the world’s third-largest but opaque fixed-income market. Investors need to improve their understanding of bond issuers and assemble a research team on the ground to dive deep into corporate financials, to compensate for the absence of full disclosure and international rating agency coverage.
The task ahead is daunting. Foreign investors are significantly underinvested in Chinese bonds. They own just over 2% of the onshore market and would need to launch an investment spree to match the index weight.
If China were included today in the most widely followed JP Morgan GBI-EM index for emerging markets debt, it could command a 10% weighting in the benchmark.
Last year, Bloomberg launched two parallel versions of its fixed-income indexes to include China bonds, while Citi did something similar with its World Government Bond Index (WGBI), including Chinese bonds in its sub-indexes.
The full inclusion of China’s bond market in global bond indexes could bring in as much as $286 billion in passive inflows, Standard Chartered said in a report last month. To be ready for the opportunity, fund managers need a far better understanding of the nation’s debt and credit markets, and the volatility associated with investing in China. Unfortunately, there isn’t any proper reckoner as yet.
For starters, a vast majority of the onshore issuers and bonds are not yet rated by any of the international rating agencies. For now, ratings of the onshore bond market are dominated by local firms which have been generous to bond issuers. More than four-fifths of the nearly 5,000 corporate bond issuers in the country have a rating of AA or higher, grades conferred only on the safest companies. Chinese rating agencies place a greater weight on implicit government support for state-owned enterprises, which are the biggest corporate issuers in China.
That assumption notwithstanding, corporate defaults have risen sixfold from a very low base two years ago as Beijing cuts capacity and moves to suck out excess liquidity.
Last year, following the launch of foreign onshore trading initiative Bond Connect – another of China’s moves to open up its markets – rating agencies such as Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s were given the green light to rate Chinese domestic issuers. However, when they can actually do so is unclear. The rating agencies need to be licensed to operate on the mainland. This is a contrast with Bond Connect, which allows foreign investors to access China’s onshore bond market through brokerages in Hong Kong.
The international rating agencies at the moment are only allowed to assess offshore bond deals, and their score on Chinese issuers clearly diverges from their local counterparts.
This all underlines the need for asset managers to invest in fully fledged analysis and hire people on the ground. One of the largest US fund managers, Fidelity International, has set up a China research team.
Fund managers also need to work out ways to combat the rising volatility. For instance, late last year following the Communist party congress, the implications of liquidity curbs rattled investors and led to the biggest bond sell-off in four years.
However, for money managers the effort, time and money comes with a bigger reward. It gives them access to the debt of a country that remains a net creditor and one that is unlikely to have any big inflation spikes. A surge in inflation typically eats away at bondholder returns.
Next, the nation’s bonds offer a yield premium, which is a big draw amid low returns globally. China’s 10-year bonds yielded 3.9% compared with 2.45% for their US peers.
As such, investors who can build a deep expertise of Chinese bonds will certainly have the opportunity not just to diversify their portfolio, but to add higher returns, as long as they can manage the risks adequately.
コンテンツを印刷またはコピーできるのは、有料の購読契約を結んでいるユーザー、または法人購読契約の一員であるユーザーのみです。
これらのオプションやその他の購読特典を利用するには、info@risk.net にお問い合わせいただくか、こちらの購読オプションをご覧ください: http://subscriptions.risk.net/subscribe
現在、このコンテンツを印刷することはできません。詳しくはinfo@risk.netまでお問い合わせください。
現在、このコンテンツをコピーすることはできません。詳しくはinfo@risk.netまでお問い合わせください。
Copyright インフォプロ・デジタル・リミテッド.無断複写・転載を禁じます。
当社の利用規約、https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/(ポイント2.4)に記載されているように、印刷は1部のみです。
追加の権利を購入したい場合は、info@risk.netまで電子メールでご連絡ください。
Copyright インフォプロ・デジタル・リミテッド.無断複写・転載を禁じます。
このコンテンツは、当社の記事ツールを使用して共有することができます。当社の利用規約、https://www.infopro-digital.com/terms-and-conditions/subscriptions/(第2.4項)に概説されているように、認定ユーザーは、個人的な使用のために資料のコピーを1部のみ作成することができます。また、2.5項の制限にも従わなければなりません。
追加権利の購入をご希望の場合は、info@risk.netまで電子メールでご連絡ください。
詳細はこちら 我々の見解
トランプ流の世界がトレンドにとって良い理由
トランプ氏の政策転換はリターンに打撃を与えました。しかし、彼を大統領の座に押し上げた勢力が、この投資戦略を再び活性化させる可能性があります。
Roll over, SRTs: Regulators fret over capital relief trades
Banks will have to balance the appeal of capital relief against the risk of a market shutdown
オムニバス(法案)の下に投げる:GARはEUの環境規制後退を乗り切れるのか?
停止措置でEU主要銀行の90%が報告を放棄で、グリーンファイナンス指標が宙ぶらりんな状態に
コリンズ修正条項はエンドゲームを迎えたのでしょうか?
スコット・ベッセント氏は、デュアル・キャピタル・スタックを終わらせたいと考えています。それが実際にどのように機能するかは、まだ不明です。
トーキング・ヘッズ2025:トランプ氏の大きな美しい債券を購入するのは誰でしょうか?
国債発行とヘッジファンドのリスクが、マクロ経済の重鎮たちを悩ませています。
AIの説明可能性に関する障壁は低くなってきている
改良され、使いやすいツールは、複雑なモデルを素早く理解するのに役立ちます。
BISの取引高はトレンドを大きく上回っているのか
最新の3年ごとの調査において、外国為替市場の日次平均取引高は9.6兆ドルに急増しましたが、これらの数値は代表的なものと言えるでしょうか。
DFASTのモノカルチャー自身が自分の試練となる
ストレステスト開示の頻度と範囲が減少したため、銀行によるFRBモデルの模倣を監視することが困難となっております。