The International Finance
Corporation (IFC) and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) have been
given approval to issue their first batch of yuan-denominated bonds
on the Chinese mainland, making them the first multilateral
financial group to do so.
The Ministry of Finance published
the information on its official website on Wednesday.
The ministry said the bonds would be
called Giant Panda Bonds because according to international
practice, a multilateral financial institution typically names
local currency-denominated bonds after the national mascot.
However, the ministry said the
details including when the bonds will be issued, and how many must
first be approved by the People's Bank of China, the country's
central bank.
"IFC is very grateful for the
opportunity to issue bonds in China's domestic capital markets,"
IFC's Acting Executive Vice-President Assaad Jabre said.
"The IFC bond, when issued, will
contribute to our broader strategy of helping China develop
stronger and deeper domestic capital markets," Jabre added.
Jabre added that the proceeds of
IFC's bond issue would be used to finance private sector projects
that IFC had already selected and appraised.
Since 1985, IFC has invested more
than US$2 billion in 100 private sector companies in China.
As one of IFC's fastest growing
client countries, China is the corporation's ninth largest country
in its portfolio. In the 2004 fiscal year, IFC committed US$391
million to 19 projects while annual commitments over the last three
years were about US$100 million. It makes China the largest country
program in the fiscal year 2004.
ADB said that its bonds would be
issued in the interbank market through a syndicate of underwriters
managed by BOC International (China) Ltd.
"ADB is privileged to be part of
this important initiative. This is a major step forward in the
development of China's capital market," Mikio Kashiwagi, ADB's
Treasurer, said.
ADB said it would use the proceeds
of the bonds to provide its China clients with local currency
financing.
ADB has a long-standing tradition of
undertaking market-opening transactions in the region's domestic
bond markets including Japan, the Republic of Korea, India,
Malaysia and Thailand.
(China Daily September 29,
2005)
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