Tuesday 28 May 2013

Singapore Hoists Dim Sum Bonds Challenge as HSBC Sells

Singapore kicked off its challenge to

Hong Kong’s dominance of the $42 billion offshore yuan bond

market yesterday, with HSBC Holdings Plc (HSBA) and Standard Chartered

Plc (STAN)
offering the city-state’s first Dim Sum notes.


HSBC sold 500 million yuan ($82 million) of two-year debt

at 2.25 percent, while Standard Chartered priced 1 billion yuan

of three-year notes at 2.625 percent after the Industrial and

Commercial Bank of China Ltd. started clearing services in the

Chinese currency in Singapore. Average yields on Dim Sum bonds,

first sold in Hong Kong in 2007, and Asian dollar corporate

securities
were 3.56 percent and 3.85 percent, respectively,

according to Bank of America indexes.


Singapore has surpassed Hong Kong as a base for Asia’s

rich. The city had 91,000 millionaires with a combined $439

billion of investable assets, compared to Hong Kong’s 84,000

with $408 billion, according to RBC Wealth Management and

Capgemini SA. Hong Kong had the world’s largest offshore yuan

savings pool at 668 billion yuan at the end of March and handles

about 90 percent of China’s trade denominated in the currency,

according to Hong Kong Monetary Authority data.


“We will see Singapore become very significant in terms of

sharing the volume of yuan traded offshore,” Aaron Russell-Davison, Singapore-based global head of bond syndicate at

Standard Chartered, said in a May 27 interview. “It is a

trading city, historically mercantile by nature.”


Asean Edge


Singapore is the world’s fourth-largest currency trading

center, while Hong Kong is sixth, according to a triennial

survey by the Bank for International Settlements issued in

September 2010. The city doubled a currency-swap agreement with

China to 300 billion yuan in March.


Singapore is also part of the 10-member Association of

Southeast Asian Nations, which took up 11.6 percent of China’s

exports in April, from 9.8 percent in September, according to

the Beijing-based Customs General Administration. That’s the

fourth-largest after Hong Kong, the U.S. and the European Union.


Singapore’s yuan clearing start is part of China’s grand

plan of internationalizing the yuan,” said James Su, who

oversees about $40 million as a fixed-income portfolio manager

at Sinopac Asset Management in Hong Kong. “From China’s

perspective, Singapore is likely to be the hub for Asean

nations.”


He added that Hong Kong will remain the dominant center due

to trade flows.


Private Bank Money


Singapore has a large pool of private bank money in U.S.

dollars, which can buy into the yuan’s appreciation, Clifford Lee, Singapore-based head of fixed-income at DBS Group Holdings

Ltd., said in a May 27 teleconference with media.


“What you see out of Singapore now, the renminbi here and

in Hong Kong, they are all fungible so they are not two separate

markets,” said Lee. “I don’t see this as a replacement or

competition in any form in terms of what Hong Kong’s role is.”


Yuan deposits in Singapore were about 60 billion yuan, Ong

Chong Tee, the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s deputy managing

director, said in June 2012. At that time, Hong Kong’s savings

stood at 558 billion yuan.


The yuan has performed the second-best among Asia’s 11

most-traded currencies this year with a 1.8 percent advance,

while the Hong Kong dollar is pegged to the greenback and the

Singapore dollar slumped 3.3 percent, according to data compiled

by Bloomberg.


Yuan Rally


China’s currency climbed to a 19-year high of 6.1210 per

dollar in Shanghai yesterday before slipping 0.02 percent today

to 6.1225. The yuan’s gain has driven a 47 basis point decrease

in the Dim Sum bond average yield this year to 3.56 percent. The

yield on China’s benchmark 10-year government bond fell 14 basis

points to 3.46 percent in the period, according to Chinabond

data.


Premier Li Keqiang signaled on May 6 that China will unveil

a plan on capital-account convertibility this year. The Chinese

currency was the 13th most-used in global payments in April,

according to the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial

Telecommunication. On March 27, it said that Taiwan was the

world’s fourth-largest offshore yuan center excluding Hong Kong,

behind the U.K., Singapore and France.


China Economy


The cost to insure sovereign notes in China against non-payment has risen 15 basis points this year. Five-year credit-default swaps were quoted at 81.5 basis points in New York

yesterday, according to data provider CMA, which is owned by

McGraw-Hill Cos. and compiles prices quoted by dealers in the

privately negotiated market.


Premier Li indicated on May 13 that policy makers are

reluctant to use stimulus to counter a slowdown in the world’s

second-largest economy. China’s economic growth has held below 8

percent for the last four quarters, the first time that has

happened in at least 20 years.


Standard Chartered and HSBC expect the start of yuan

clearing services in Singapore to lead to more Dim Sum bond

sales as deposits rise in the city-state. Offshore yuan debt

sales in Hong Kong doubled this year to 144 billion yuan and may

reach 360 billion yuan this year, according to estimates from

HSBC.


As the offshore yuan center in Singapore develops, it will

be “more convenient for users of the currency, particularly for

issuers and investors whose cash and regional operations are

based in Singapore,” Matthew Cannon, head of global markets for

Singapore at HSBC, said in a phone interview yesterday.


Direct Trading


New Zealand and China are in talks to make their currencies

directly convertible, aiming to reduce costs as trade between

the two countries is targeted to surge by 33 percent in the next

two years. Direct trading between the yuan and the Australian

dollar started last month, making the Aussie the third major

currency to be directly convertible with China’s, following the

dollar and the Japanese yen.


“As a well-established global debt trading hub, Singapore

should be a natural center for the trading of offshore renminbi

bonds,” Jake Gearhart, Deutsche Bank AG head of global risk

syndicate for Asia in Singapore, said in an e-mail interview

yesterday. “Now that renminbi clearing is live in the city,

Singapore clearly has a unique role to play in shaping this

development, as one of the region’s primary FX, commodities and

rates trading hubs.”


To contact the reporters on this story:

Fion Li in Hong Kong at

fli59@bloomberg.net;

Rachel Evans in Hong Kong at

revans43@bloomberg.net


To contact the editor responsible for this story:

James Regan at

jregan19@bloomberg.net



Enlarge image
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Singapore Hoists Dim Sum Challenge as HSBC Sells


3fcec iTWLV9MVMHbA Singapore Launches Yuan Clearing System


Sam Kang Li/Bloomberg


Marina Bay Sands stands in Singapore. lured tourists. Singapore is the world’s fourth-largest currency trading center and is also part of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which took up 11.6 percent of China’s exports in April, from 9.8 percent in September.


Marina Bay Sands stands in Singapore. lured tourists. Singapore is the world’s fourth-largest currency trading center and is also part of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which took up 11.6 percent of China’s exports in April, from 9.8 percent in September. Photographer: Sam Kang Li/Bloomberg



Singapore Hoists Dim Sum Bonds Challenge as HSBC Sells

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