Big China Story Seen by Pimco in Hands of Bond-Index Compilers
Sunday,13/03/2016|14:00GMTby
Bloomberg News
Fund managers say global markets are underestimating the impact on China of a small group of specialists: bond index compilers.Pacific...
Fund managers say global markets are underestimating the impact on China of a small group of specialists: bond index compilers.
Pacific Investment Management Co. and AXA Investment Managers Asia Ltd. say the government’s opening up of its interbank debt market to foreign investors means the nation will be added to world benchmarks sooner than expected. While Citigroup Inc., Barclays Plc and JPMorgan Chase & Co. are being coy for now, brokerages are predicting inclusion will lead to a fivefold surge in foreign holdings of yuan debt by 2020.
“Market participants seem to have underestimated the chance for inclusion of China’s bond market into global indexes," said Aidan Yao, a senior economist at AXA Investment in Hong Kong. "As the world’s third-largest bond market, foreign investor interest in onshore debt is rising structurally because of the need for diversified global asset allocation.”
Inclusion would bring in funds just as China’s policy makers seek to stem the yuan’s losses and finance stimulus that will widen the budget deficit to a record 3 percent of gross domestic product this year. Standard Chartered Plc estimates that a 5-8 percent weighting in the Citigroup index may bring inflows of $100 billion to $160 billion from index-tracking fund managers alone. Foreign investors have been leaving China’s debt market at a record pace this year with the currency posting the biggest three-month decline through January since 1994.
“Chinese bonds are likely to be included in major bond market indexes sooner than expected -- probably in the next year or two," Luke Spajic, an emerging-market money manager at Pimco, wrote in a March 3 blog. He said in a Feb. 25 interview that, given the details of the market opening haven’t been announced, an increase in foreign access is “probably going to be a second half of the year story and certainly a big story for 2017.”
His comments came after the People’s Bank of China said on Feb. 24 that most types of overseas financial institutions will no longer need quotas to invest in the interbank bond market, which accounts for the bulk of debt in the nation. Also, in early February, China said fund managers approved under its Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor program won’t need to apply for allocations. Open-ended funds will be able to shift money in and out of the nation’s stocks on a daily basis.
Citi Welcome
As for debt, the Citi World Government Bond Index, JPMorgan Global Bond Index-Emerging Market, and Barclays Global Aggregate Index are the biggest that are likely to consider including Chinese securities, according to Standard Chartered. Citigroup Index LLC said on March 3 it welcomes the regulatory changes geared toward opening markets and it will continue to assess China’s eligibility, Barclays said it is “monitoring the situation” and JPMorgan declined to comment.
“Citi’s welcome message implies the possibility of the onshore market being included in the index,” according to Becky Liu, Hong Kong-based senior rates strategist at Standard Chartered. The Chinese market met requirements in terms of market size and credit quality long ago, and the latest policy changes on access have largely addressed the last hurdle, she said.
Market access to China bonds will be much easier than to Equities, said AXA’s Yao. Global index company MSCI Inc. responded to the easing of restriction on fund managers by saying that the steps were "significant" and that it will seek feedback from the international investment community before making a final decision on whether to include Chinese stocks in June. MSCI held off from adding China’s A shares to its benchmark indexes last year.
Foreign Investors
Foreign holdings of China’s onshore bonds declined for a third month in February to 541.3 billion yuan, extending a record drop of 49.6 billion yuan in January, China Central Depository & Clearing Co. data show. Foreign ownership of yuan bonds is likely to rise to 8-10 percent from less than 2 percent in the next five years, Deutsche Bank AG estimated, while Standard Chartered forecast an increase of up to 7 percent by 2020.
“There are a lot of technical details from currency conversion to fund repatriation rules waiting to be sorted out, so index providers are probably waiting for them before making any moves,” said Melody He, Hong Kong-based head of capital markets at CSOP Asset Management Ltd., which has $4 billion of assets under management and holds the biggest quota for investing offshore yuan back into the mainland.
Yield, Yuan
The yield on China’s benchmark 10-year sovereign note is heading for a ninth quarterly drop, retreating 169 basis points since the beginning of 2014 to 2.87 percent on Thursday. That’s much higher than the 1.86 percent yield in South Korea and 0.81 percent in Taiwan, which are both rated at Aa3, the same as China, by Moody’s Investors Service.
The yuan has declined 4.5 percent since an August devaluation, reaching a five-year low in January before central bank intervention helped pare some of the losses.
“A lot of people are concerned that yuan Volatility could lower the attractiveness of onshore bonds, but in the long run, if you look at other Asian markets, weakening currencies don’t necessarily lead to a drop of foreign holdings of local bonds,” said Xie Yaxuan, a Shenzhen-based economist at China Merchants Securities Co. “Global investors have varied fund sources, risk preference and investment style, it’s inappropriate to be overly bearish about China’s value in global asset allocation.”
--With assistance from Lianting Tu and Liau Y-Sing To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Helen Sun in Shanghai at hsun30@bloomberg.net, Molly Wei in Hong Kong at xwei56@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Richard Frost at rfrost4@bloomberg.net, Robin Ganguly, Sandy Hendry
Fund managers say global markets are underestimating the impact on China of a small group of specialists: bond index compilers.
Pacific Investment Management Co. and AXA Investment Managers Asia Ltd. say the government’s opening up of its interbank debt market to foreign investors means the nation will be added to world benchmarks sooner than expected. While Citigroup Inc., Barclays Plc and JPMorgan Chase & Co. are being coy for now, brokerages are predicting inclusion will lead to a fivefold surge in foreign holdings of yuan debt by 2020.
“Market participants seem to have underestimated the chance for inclusion of China’s bond market into global indexes," said Aidan Yao, a senior economist at AXA Investment in Hong Kong. "As the world’s third-largest bond market, foreign investor interest in onshore debt is rising structurally because of the need for diversified global asset allocation.”
Inclusion would bring in funds just as China’s policy makers seek to stem the yuan’s losses and finance stimulus that will widen the budget deficit to a record 3 percent of gross domestic product this year. Standard Chartered Plc estimates that a 5-8 percent weighting in the Citigroup index may bring inflows of $100 billion to $160 billion from index-tracking fund managers alone. Foreign investors have been leaving China’s debt market at a record pace this year with the currency posting the biggest three-month decline through January since 1994.
“Chinese bonds are likely to be included in major bond market indexes sooner than expected -- probably in the next year or two," Luke Spajic, an emerging-market money manager at Pimco, wrote in a March 3 blog. He said in a Feb. 25 interview that, given the details of the market opening haven’t been announced, an increase in foreign access is “probably going to be a second half of the year story and certainly a big story for 2017.”
His comments came after the People’s Bank of China said on Feb. 24 that most types of overseas financial institutions will no longer need quotas to invest in the interbank bond market, which accounts for the bulk of debt in the nation. Also, in early February, China said fund managers approved under its Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor program won’t need to apply for allocations. Open-ended funds will be able to shift money in and out of the nation’s stocks on a daily basis.
Citi Welcome
As for debt, the Citi World Government Bond Index, JPMorgan Global Bond Index-Emerging Market, and Barclays Global Aggregate Index are the biggest that are likely to consider including Chinese securities, according to Standard Chartered. Citigroup Index LLC said on March 3 it welcomes the regulatory changes geared toward opening markets and it will continue to assess China’s eligibility, Barclays said it is “monitoring the situation” and JPMorgan declined to comment.
“Citi’s welcome message implies the possibility of the onshore market being included in the index,” according to Becky Liu, Hong Kong-based senior rates strategist at Standard Chartered. The Chinese market met requirements in terms of market size and credit quality long ago, and the latest policy changes on access have largely addressed the last hurdle, she said.
Market access to China bonds will be much easier than to Equities, said AXA’s Yao. Global index company MSCI Inc. responded to the easing of restriction on fund managers by saying that the steps were "significant" and that it will seek feedback from the international investment community before making a final decision on whether to include Chinese stocks in June. MSCI held off from adding China’s A shares to its benchmark indexes last year.
Foreign Investors
Foreign holdings of China’s onshore bonds declined for a third month in February to 541.3 billion yuan, extending a record drop of 49.6 billion yuan in January, China Central Depository & Clearing Co. data show. Foreign ownership of yuan bonds is likely to rise to 8-10 percent from less than 2 percent in the next five years, Deutsche Bank AG estimated, while Standard Chartered forecast an increase of up to 7 percent by 2020.
“There are a lot of technical details from currency conversion to fund repatriation rules waiting to be sorted out, so index providers are probably waiting for them before making any moves,” said Melody He, Hong Kong-based head of capital markets at CSOP Asset Management Ltd., which has $4 billion of assets under management and holds the biggest quota for investing offshore yuan back into the mainland.
Yield, Yuan
The yield on China’s benchmark 10-year sovereign note is heading for a ninth quarterly drop, retreating 169 basis points since the beginning of 2014 to 2.87 percent on Thursday. That’s much higher than the 1.86 percent yield in South Korea and 0.81 percent in Taiwan, which are both rated at Aa3, the same as China, by Moody’s Investors Service.
The yuan has declined 4.5 percent since an August devaluation, reaching a five-year low in January before central bank intervention helped pare some of the losses.
“A lot of people are concerned that yuan Volatility could lower the attractiveness of onshore bonds, but in the long run, if you look at other Asian markets, weakening currencies don’t necessarily lead to a drop of foreign holdings of local bonds,” said Xie Yaxuan, a Shenzhen-based economist at China Merchants Securities Co. “Global investors have varied fund sources, risk preference and investment style, it’s inappropriate to be overly bearish about China’s value in global asset allocation.”
--With assistance from Lianting Tu and Liau Y-Sing To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Helen Sun in Shanghai at hsun30@bloomberg.net, Molly Wei in Hong Kong at xwei56@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Richard Frost at rfrost4@bloomberg.net, Robin Ganguly, Sandy Hendry
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CMC Markets’ Artur Delijergijevs on Metals Demand, Volatility, & Stable Execution
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- Metals Demand: Why metals are seeing the strongest demand from both retail and institutional clients right now.
- The Safe-Haven Debate: Questioning whether gold still fits the classic safe-haven definition given large daily price movements.
- Volatile Market Prep: How a market-making desk prepares its systems and pricing for stressed market conditions and high-impact economic events.
- Hybrid Execution: Why the best execution model combines electronic speed with human relationship support, especially during volatility.
- AI in Workflow: Where CMC Markets is integrating machine learning for risk management and pricing, and the limitations of AI during stressed markets.
- Dubai's Role: The strategic importance of Dubai’s location for covering global trading sessions across Asia, Europe, and the US.
Watch to understand how CMC Markets maintains stable pricing and reliable execution quality in high-volatility environments.
#CMCmarkets #forex #metals #gold #trading #volatility #MarketMaking #iFXDubai #FinanceMagnates #Finance #Fintech #Execution #AlgorithmicTrading #RiskManagement
In this exclusive Executive Interview, Finance Magnates speaks with Artur Delijergijevs, Head of Systematic Market Making at CMC Markets, about the current state of metals demand and market volatility.
Delijergijevs offers a desk-level view on:
- Metals Demand: Why metals are seeing the strongest demand from both retail and institutional clients right now.
- The Safe-Haven Debate: Questioning whether gold still fits the classic safe-haven definition given large daily price movements.
- Volatile Market Prep: How a market-making desk prepares its systems and pricing for stressed market conditions and high-impact economic events.
- Hybrid Execution: Why the best execution model combines electronic speed with human relationship support, especially during volatility.
- AI in Workflow: Where CMC Markets is integrating machine learning for risk management and pricing, and the limitations of AI during stressed markets.
- Dubai's Role: The strategic importance of Dubai’s location for covering global trading sessions across Asia, Europe, and the US.
Watch to understand how CMC Markets maintains stable pricing and reliable execution quality in high-volatility environments.
#CMCmarkets #forex #metals #gold #trading #volatility #MarketMaking #iFXDubai #FinanceMagnates #Finance #Fintech #Execution #AlgorithmicTrading #RiskManagement
Finance Magnates Awards 2026 – Nominations Now Open
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The Finance Magnates Awards 2026 nominations are now open. 🏆
From fintech innovators to leading brokers, this is where the finance industry celebrates its biggest achievements.
Winners will be announced at the Cyprus Gala Dinner on November 6, 2026.
Nominate your brand now.
https://awards.financemagnates.com/?utm_source=linkedin&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=nominations-open
#FMAwards #FinanceMagnates #FintechAwards #Fintech #FinanceIndustry
The Finance Magnates Awards 2026 nominations are now open. 🏆
From fintech innovators to leading brokers, this is where the finance industry celebrates its biggest achievements.
Winners will be announced at the Cyprus Gala Dinner on November 6, 2026.
Nominate your brand now.
https://awards.financemagnates.com/?utm_source=linkedin&utm_medium=video&utm_campaign=nominations-open
#FMAwards #FinanceMagnates #FintechAwards #Fintech #FinanceIndustry
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Lights on. Cameras ready. 🎬
Finance Magnates Awards 2026 nominations are now open. 🏆
#FMAwards #FinanceMagnates #FintechAwards #Fintech
Lights on. Cameras ready. 🎬
Finance Magnates Awards 2026 nominations are now open. 🏆
#FMAwards #FinanceMagnates #FintechAwards #Fintech
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In this interview, you'll learn:
* Why Dubai and the MENA region are critical growth markets for fintech and online trading.
* How Exness is addressing the demands of mobile-first, younger traders through engineering, platform stability, and transparent conditions.
* The essential role local talent plays in providing a culturally relevant and compliant user experience.
* Mohammad Amer's outlook on the future of the online trading industry and why stronger controls and systems are necessary.
* Why "trust" isn't just a brand value, but has commercial value—and why he predicts 2026 will be the "Year of Trust."
Key Takeaways:
➡️ The MENA region is rapidly shaping global financial markets.
➡️ New traders expect stability, precise execution, and transparency.
➡️ Local expertise is key to regulatory compliance and user experience.
➡️ Future success belongs to firms capable of meeting rising standards across regulation and platform consistency.
Read the full article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/exness-sees-trust-as-the-key-theme-for-growth-in-mena-trading-growth-for-2026/
#Exness #MENA #Trading #FinTech #Dubai #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #MohammadAmer #Trust #MobileTrading
Mohammad Amer, Regional Commercial Director at Exness, sits down to discuss the booming MENA financial trading market. Find out why Dubai is key to the company's growth strategy, how a mobile-first generation is changing expectations, and why trust will be the defining theme for traders in 2026.
In this interview, you'll learn:
* Why Dubai and the MENA region are critical growth markets for fintech and online trading.
* How Exness is addressing the demands of mobile-first, younger traders through engineering, platform stability, and transparent conditions.
* The essential role local talent plays in providing a culturally relevant and compliant user experience.
* Mohammad Amer's outlook on the future of the online trading industry and why stronger controls and systems are necessary.
* Why "trust" isn't just a brand value, but has commercial value—and why he predicts 2026 will be the "Year of Trust."
Key Takeaways:
➡️ The MENA region is rapidly shaping global financial markets.
➡️ New traders expect stability, precise execution, and transparency.
➡️ Local expertise is key to regulatory compliance and user experience.
➡️ Future success belongs to firms capable of meeting rising standards across regulation and platform consistency.
Read the full article at: https://www.financemagnates.com/thought-leadership/exness-sees-trust-as-the-key-theme-for-growth-in-mena-trading-growth-for-2026/
#Exness #MENA #Trading #FinTech #Dubai #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #MohammadAmer #Trust #MobileTrading
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#PaymentOrchestration #Fintech #Brokerage #TradingPayments #RaziSalih #Paytiko #iFXExpoDubai #Stablecoins #AIinFintech
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Mr. Salih explains how global expansion, the need for deep localisation, and the sheer number of new payment methods, from instant banking to stablecoins, are driving this critical infrastructure shift.
#PaymentOrchestration #Fintech #Brokerage #TradingPayments #RaziSalih #Paytiko #iFXExpoDubai #Stablecoins #AIinFintech