Analysis-Debt boom signals yuan’s arrival as a funding currency

Analysis-Debt boom signals yuan’s arrival as a funding currency

Analysis-Debt boom signals yuan’s arrival as a funding currency

By Jiaxing Li

HONG KONG, Dec 19 (Reuters) – Investors are snapping up yuan credits and surging yuan lending is poised to overtake overseas dollar loans at Chinese banks as attractive pricing helps drive a sustained push by Beijing to put the yuan on the global stage.

China’s overseas bank lending has tripled in four years to 2.52 trillion yuan and sales of onshore and offshore yuan debt are at or near records for ​the second year running.

Bankers say the boom is encouraged by cost, because yuan rates are low. But the market is also starting to generate its own momentum and a deepening pool of demand to own and spend yuan – ‌a sign China’s drive to globalise the currency is making headway even without progress to liberalise capital accounts.

“I think this phase is now really more driven by fundamental interest in renminbi funding,” said Samuel Fischer, Deutsche Bank’s head of China onshore debt capital markets.

“There’s more and more international investors who don’t look at ‌this just as an arbitrage, but who really have renminbi allocation and there are some very big anchor orders from outside China,” he said. “The dollar is at a critical juncture, and diversification is really happening.”

China has sought for years to promote the yuan as a currency for international trade and financing, and its share of global foreign exchange turnover has steadily climbed from a low base – reaching about 8.5% in April, according to the Bank for International Settlements. The dollar comprises 89% of turnover.

This year non-Chinese issuers raised 169.7 billion yuan ($24.10 billion) in onshore markets over the 11 months to end November, while a record 801.9 billion yuan was raised by all issuers in offshore markets, where demand was strong.

It’s a drop in the ocean of the record $9.57 trillion raised globally this year, according to Dealogic data, ⁠of which about $4.5 trillion was in dollars and $2.2 trillion in euros. But in the last ‌three years the value of foreigners’ onshore and offshore issuance of yuan debt has more than doubled, China central bank data shows.

In the loan market, central bank data shows lending in foreign currencies – mostly dollars – fell to $375 billion at the end of November, from a peak of $587 billion in 2022, while the value of yuan lending hit $357 billion.

PRICE POINT IS BIG DRIVER

For issuers, the major driver is ‍price.

Yuan funding costs have run below those of the dollar since 2022, as U.S. rates have climbed to curtail inflation and Chinese rates have fallen to try and stave off deflation.

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