|
China's city commercial banks showed strong interest in China Development Bank's latest bond issues in the absence of investment alternatives, driving down yields on the policy bank's debt, debt market participants told Caijing.
On May 12, CDB auctioned 15 billion yuan worth of 10-year floating-rate bonds at 55 basis points above the one-year benchmark deposit rate. The spread was 17 basis points lower than analysts' expectations. On April 22, the CDB also issued 15 billion yuan in 7-year floating-rate bonds for a spread of 65 basis points, also lower than expected.
A person working in the debt market told Caijing that the response to the CDB issues has been unusual with city commercial banks taking up the majority of the issue while brokerages and larger banks accounted for only a small part.
"Our previous investigations show that many of these smaller city banks have large amounts of funds that they cannot invest elsewhere."
The person noted that city commercial banks are choosing to invest their funds in medium- and long-term financial securities because they cannot compete with larger banks in providing credit for major projects.
Smaller commercial lenders are missing out on China's current credit surge, as larger state-owned lenders can accommodate the higher risks associated with extending loans to infrastructure projects backed by the government's 4-trillion-yuan stimulus plan.
City banks and rural credit cooperatives have also turned to high-yield local urban construction bonds as possible investments, even though these may carry greater risk than previously assumed. |
|