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China Draws Bumper Demand for Multi-Tranche Dollar Bond

Sale also includes three-year, 10-year and 20-year securities, helping to build out a benchmark yield curve for Chinese issuers.

China Draws Bumper Demand for Multi-Tranche Dollar Bond
A man holds wooden chopsticks above a plate of Chinese one-hundred yuan banknotes on a black background in this arranged photograph in Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Paul Yeung/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- China’s latest dollar bond offering has drawn more than $20 billion of investor orders so far, according to people familiar with the matter.

That’s more than triple the $6 billion targeted deal size. China announced final price guidance that has narrowed from its initial price talk.

TenorIPTFPG
3 YearsT+60bp areaT+35bps(#)
5 YearsT+65bp areaT+40bps(#)
10 YearsT+70bp areaT+50bps(#)
20 YearsT+80bp areaT+70bps(#)

Wonnie Chu, managing director of fixed income at GaoTeng Global Asset Management Ltd., predicted that the premiums would come down in the final pricing.

“We expect there will be strong investor appetite for the deal on demand for quality issuers and we see mainly bank support for sovereign,” she said.

China on Tuesday morning announced initial price guidance for its five-year notes at 65 basis points area over comparable U.S. Treasuries. That compares with 50 basis points area last year and 30 to 40 basis points in 2017. The pricing could still change as the deal proceeds.

The sale also includes three-year, 10-year and 20-year securities, helping to build out a benchmark yield curve for Chinese issuers, which range from private companies to local authorities.

Read the full initial pricing guidance for the sovereign offering here.

China Draws Bumper Demand for Multi-Tranche Dollar Bond

The order book for last year’s sale showed diminished interest from U.S.-based investors amid the escalation in the trade war. The bulk of dollar bonds sold by Chinese issuers is typically taken up by Chinese buyers -- they’re a convenient place for banks to invest their foreign-currency deposits.

Century Bond

With the latest sale, China will have dollar securities outstanding with maturity dates ranging from 2022 to 2096 (the result of a small century bond sold in the 1990s). There will be an increasing variety of maturities off which Chinese corporate debt can price, with sovereign benchmarks at maturities from 2022 to 2048 of at least half a billion dollars each.

Read more: China Sets IPT on New USD Bonds 17-32bps Above Curve

The total Chinese dollar bond market now tops $740 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, and issuance so far this year has run at a record pace. On a single day in early November, some six property developers were selling dollar securities.

Earlier this month, China also sold euro debt, the first time since 2004 that it issued in that currency. That deal saw blowout demand, with a majority orders coming from European funds in a region that’s been beset by negative-yielding securities.

To contact the reporters on this story: Annie Lee in Hong Kong at olee42@bloomberg.net;Rebecca Choong Wilkins in Hong Kong at rchoongwilki@bloomberg.net;Ina Zhou in Hong Kong at hzhou179@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Christopher Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net, Ravil Shirodkar, Chan Tien Hin

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.