标题: China Doubles Korea Bond Holdings as Asia Switches From Dollar [打印本页] 作者: 飞雪寒冰 时间: 2010-8-18 10:22 标题: China Doubles Korea Bond Holdings as Asia Switches From Dollar China more than doubled South Korean debt holdings this year, spurring the notes’ longest rally in more than three years, as policy makers shifted part of the world’s largest foreign-exchange reserves out of dollars.
Korean Treasury bonds held by Chinese investors rose 111 percent to 3.99 trillion won ($3.4 billion) in the first half of the year, according to data from the Seoul-based Financial Supervisory Service. China should diversify into Asian assets to “stabilize returns and reduce risks,” said Ding Zhijie, a former adviser to China’s sovereign wealth fund.
“It’s the right direction for China to allocate some of its reserves to financial assets in major Asian economies,” Ding, dean of finance at Beijing’s University of International Business and Economics, said in an Aug. 16 interview. “The significance of both the dollar and euro has declined because of the global financial crisis and the European debt crisis, while the role of some emerging-market currencies rose.”作者: 飞雪寒冰 时间: 2010-8-18 10:23
The purchases accounted for 19 percent of foreign inflows, up from 10 percent last year, and Societe Generale SA predicts they will spur further bond-market gains. China’s holdings of South Korean notes account for little more than 0.1 percent of its $2.45 trillion reserves. The increase in the first six months compares with $20.1 billion pumped into Japanese debt.
“At this rate China may buy about 4 trillion won of KTBs by year-end, and that’s a big deal,” said Christian Carrillo, the Tokyo-based head of fixed-income strategy at SocGen, France’s second-biggest bank. “That will be bullish for the market. It’ll create a severe demand-supply imbalance in the KTBs, pushing yields to fall even more aggressively.”
Bond Returns
KTBs have handed investors a 5.6 percent return this year in dollar terms, delivering a profit every month, according to an index compiled by HSBC Holdings Plc. The advance marks the best winning streak since March 2007. U.S. Treasuries have gained 7.9 percent, according to the Bank of America Merrill Lynch U.S. Treasury Master Index.
Diversification should be the “basic principle” of reserve management, Yu Yongding, a former adviser to the People’s Bank of China, said in an interview this month. China’s holdings of Treasuries fell 6 percent in the first half to $843.7 billion, Department of Treasury data released this week show.作者: 飞雪寒冰 时间: 2010-8-18 10:23
Asian central banks holding about 60 percent of the world’s foreign-exchange reserves are cutting their U.S. dollar assets. South Korea, Malaysia and India reduced their holdings of Treasuries, the data show. Allocations to dollars in official reserves fell in the first three months of the year, to 61.5 percent from 62.2 percent in the final quarter of 2009, the International Monetary Fund said June 30.
‘Safe Haven’
The value of KTBs owned by China totaled 1.87 trillion won on Dec. 31, up from 79.6 billion at the end of 2008, FSS data show. Foreigners’ total holdings increased by 18.6 trillion won in 2009 and climbed 11.3 trillion won to 67.8 trillion won in the first half. That’s equivalent to 6.3 percent of South Korea’s outstanding government debt.
“The number of long-term investors who view Korean bonds as a new safe haven has increased,” Kim Jung Kwan, director of the Ministry of Strategy and Finance’s government bond policy division, said in an interview last month. “Korean bonds are attractive in yields and liquidity, as well as for diversification purposes.”
South Korea’s benchmark three-year bonds yielded 3.75 percent yesterday, the lowest in two months, while the rate on similar-maturity U.S. debt was 0.78 percent. Dollar-denominated returns may be boosted by gains in the won, which will strengthen 3 percent to 1,140 versus the greenback by the end of the year, according to the median estimate of 20 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.