UK To Be First Non-China State To Issue Renminbi Bond

amoy

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UK To Be First Non-China State To Issue Renminbi Bond - Forbes
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/...pportunities-as-britain-issues-first-rmb-debt

George Osborne has announced that the UK is to be the first Western, or non-China, state to issue a renminbi bond. This is part and parcel of his design to make the City of London the pre-eminent offshore trading center for the currency as the restrictions on non-domestic use are gradually weakened. The bond won't be all that large in the scheme of such things, around 2 Billion RMB is the general consensus. It's also tiny as compared to the government's overall borrowing of near £130 billion a year at present. However, it will help to develop the market:

The UK will become the first western country to issue a government bond denominated in Chinese currency, in a move touted by Britain's Treasury as a sign of the two countries' deepening ties.

The renminbi bond will be used to add to Britain's foreign currency reserves, which hitherto did not contain Chinese currency, said George Osborne, the chancellor, at a press conference following meetings with Ma Kai, China's vice-premier.


This follows on from the launch of the first "sukuk" (ie, conforming to Islamic principles on no interest but payments from profit participation instead) bond back in the summer.

The basic thought here is that in order to construct a viable bond market you want to have some sovereign issues in that currency or of that structure to act as the risk free benchmark for other issuers. It would be entirely possible for a corporate to issue renminbi bonds in London. It's just that no one would really have any idea how to price it: there would be no comparators. Thus such borrowing would be very expensive: uncertainty over price in financial markets tends to make the price rather high.

So issue sovereign bonds and that issue or issues can act as that pricing benchmark. If, say, IBM IBM +1.97% is normally priced at 300 basis points over sovereign (that's just an example, not an actual price. In some places and at some times IBM has been inside sovereign prices) and we've got a sovereign bond in that currency then we know how to price an IBM bond.


The other question is, well, what on earth is the British Government going to do with 2 billion RMB? They've said that it will be added to the country's foreign exchange reserves. In much the same way that previous borrowings in dollars have been (as an aside I worked, in a very minor manner, on the first UK sovereign borrowing in dollars. Nothing fancy in my role, I was the accounting clerk adding up the expenses as a student intern). For large amounts of such foreign currency, say for a currency intervention to stabilise the FX rate or something, central banks can and do make arrangements to swap large amounts of their respective currencies. But it's always nice to have smaller amounts immediately to hand.

This isn't, this renminbi deal, a huge development as far as the financial markets are concerned. Once launched the bond is likely to do not very much and to sit in quiet corners of investment accounts for years on end. The import of the story is really the intent that it shows: that London aims to become, and the government intends to aid it to become, the major offshore centre for the trading of renminbi and for the offshore issuance of bonds in that currency. Just as it was and remains for the issuance of offshore dollar bonds and the Eurobond market as a whole (which is now slightly misnamed as it's not limited to Europe at all).

 

Ray

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UK is in such dire straits that soon they will be ready to become bonded labour, let alone issue bonds in foreign currency! :rofl:

It is also the first western nation to sell Islamic bonds in June.

The UK Treasury will use the proceeds of the bond sale to finance the nation's foreign currency reserves.
 

amoy

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Now European Central Bank -



And with the engine of European economy, China, Germany sign $18.1 billion deals
Airbus SAS and China Aviation Supplies Holding Co signed a general terms agreement for China to buy 70 A320 Airbuses.

The two sides also signed a letter of intent reconfirming their intention to set up an A330 completion and delivery center in Tianjin,where an A320 assembly line is already located.
Experts said this indicates that the two driving forces in Europe and Asia are focusing less on low-end manufacturing and more on high-tech fields.

The premier's visit to Germany comes as Merkel looks to increase exports outside Europe and as the euro-area economy struggles.

Germany's exports fell by 5.8 percent in August, the most in five and a half years. The government is reviewing its growth forecasts after four economic institutes advising Merkel said on Thursday that GDP will probably only grow by 1.2 percent in 2015 instead of the 2 percent they predicted in April.

"It's no wonder we have to look to China for leveraging exports," said Michael Fuchs, a deputy parliamentary leader of Merkel's Christian Democrats in the lower house.

"It's on our radar and helping to take up the slack as our main European trading partners remain weak. It's also an enormous, attractive market."

German exporters are keen to increase sales in Asia.

Mario Ohoven, president of the BVMW lobby group that represents thousands of small and medium-sized companies, said: "In Germany, every family has on average 1.5 cars, but in China only one in 20 families has. This is the market of the future. We can't get around that. Our sights must be on Asia."

Eberhard Sandschneider, director of studies at the German Council on Foreign Relations in Berlin, said Germany's courtship of China is not one-sided.

China wants German support for its "new Silk Road" plan to increase trade with the West as it confronts its own economic challenges, Sandschneider said.

Li's German trip follows Merkel's visit to China in July, her seventh official trip to the country. President Xi Jinping visited Berlin in March.

Li will next travel to Russia, which is engaged in a standoff with the West over the Ukraine conflict, before meeting Western leaders at an Asia-Europe Meeting in Italy on Oct 16 and 17.
 

pmaitra

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UK is a pen-pusher and paper-pusher economy.

60-70 years ago, they used to make the best steam locomotives, and for centuries before that, some of the finest ships. Today, even the Jaguar and Land Rover does not belong to them. Banking, and making money while doing nothing (read: usury) is the only thing they are good at, if we ignore stealing oil.
 

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