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China’s Biggest Bond Trader Adds Staff in New York, London

China’s Biggest Bond Trader Expands in New York, London, Tokyo

China’s biggest broker of government bonds by trading volume is scaling up its overseas offices to attract more customers in the world’s largest financial hubs.

China International Capital Corp. is increasing headcount for debt-related services in New York, London, Tokyo and Singapore and has already seen active customers increase by more than 30%, according to Patty Li, executive director of the firm’s fixed-income department. The goal is to become a bridge for foreign investors interested in the China market, she said.

“We have begun to deploy additional manpower” to major financial centers overseas, Shanghai-based Li said in an interview last week. “Those on the ground are actively applying for licenses from regulators. At the same time, before formally obtaining the licenses, we have started research on business opportunities to lay the foundation for future development.”

China’s Biggest Bond Trader Adds Staff in New York, London

CICC’s expansion plans -- the firm had China’s largest government-bond trading volumes in the first half of the year -- is the latest step in a counteroffensive by local companies against the rising presence of overseas banks in the Asian nation. Huatai Securities Co., one of the country’s biggest brokerages, is aiming to double its share of international business to about 20% of revenue, while Citic Securities Co. and Haitong Securities Co. have also moved to grow abroad.

In the other direction, U.S. financial behemoths such as BlackRock Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are increasing their operations in China as the country opens up its $45 trillion financial industry.

Bond Connect

The drive to market Chinese government bonds to more foreign clients comes amid their growing popularity among global investors this year. Overseas funds have boosted holdings of the nation’s sovereign debt to record highs, taking advantage of rising yield premiums and relatively low correlations with other asset classes.

Foreign investors bought a net 50 billion yuan ($7.7 billion) of China’s sovereign debt in July, nearly four times that of June, according to data from ChinaBond published Wednesday. China’s government bonds returned 3.8% in dollar terms this year, compared with a loss of 0.9% in U.S. Treasuries, according to Bloomberg Barclays bond indexes.

China’s Biggest Bond Trader Adds Staff in New York, London

The surge in foreign interest can be seen in volumes pouring through the Bond Connect channel, which allows investors from Mainland China and overseas to trade in each other’s markets.

Secondary trading of government debt via the channel jumped to nearly four times the entire total of 2020 in the first half of this year, said Ke Wang, managing director for global rates trading in CICC’s fixed-income department in Beijing. The amount changing hands through the China Interbank Bond Market has risen to about 2.7 times last year’s total, he said.

“Although we’re currently faced with some constraints due to the pandemic, we still added dozens of overseas corporate customers in the first half of this year through long-distance roadshows and hosting virtual forums,” Wang said. “At the same time, the number of active trading customers increased by about 31%.”

Looking ahead, Wang believes CICC’s role as a market maker for investors at home and abroad will help it attract more foreign clients. It is likely to gain further business from overseas funds diversifying their holdings beyond government debt into other asset classes such as green bonds and those related to social and governance causes, he said.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg