Hedging and Investment Opportunities in China's Offshore CNH market

 
FX Outlook; Asia
February 01, 2011 Posted by:

The views expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not reflect the views of SVB Financial Group, or Silicon Valley Bank, or any of its affiliates.

China's effort to create an offshore international market for its currency in Hong Kong has generated huge excitement. Since China liberalized trade settlement and investment rules last July, large amount of CNH (CNY that are freely traded in Hong Kong) has accumulated in Hong Kong's banking system. CNY deposits in Hong Kong jumped to 300 billion at the end of 2010, from 63 billion at the end of 2009. By contrast, the overall foreign currency account in Hong Kong increased by just 15 percent in the past year.

It can be reasoned that CNH trading is a very minute step towards the internationalization of the Chinese currency because the liberal CNY regime has been largely confined to Hong Kong. And China ultimately controls the amount of yuan available to be freely traded offshore. However, market participants are optimistic about the outlook for the offshore market based on heavy demand for the currency for trade and investment purposes. By allowing an offshore CNY market to flourish, it reveals the savvy financial skill of the Chinese government to manage the growing offshore interests in CNY and to take advantage of the speculative interests on CNY appreciation to direct it into a more productive application.

Investors Seek Wealth in Yuan-denominated Investments

For years, there has been a consensus among investors that the CNY is going to appreciate in the short and long term. Given this much-anticipated appreciation of the currency against the USD, many retail investors have already been making daily purchases of the Chinese currency up to the permitted limit of CNY 20,000 per person. Since Beijing ditched the CNY's de-facto peg to the greenback in June last year, China's currency has appreciated over 3 percent. Investors will continue to find ways to speculate on CNY appreciation as long as CNY is a restricted currency.

With the CNH market, investors can now build exposure in CNY by acquiring CNH-denominated assets. Offshore companies without any immediate trade-related reason can now hold CNY in an offshore CNH account to build CNY exposure. On the other side are mainland businesses, often Chinese companies owned or backed by the government that want to borrow CNY to fund onshore operations. Backed by the demand for CNH assets from offshore investors, mainland companies can borrow, issue bonds and soon raise equity in CNH.

Indeed, investor interest is fuelling the rapid development of a CNH-denominated corporate bond market, nicknamed "dim sum" bonds by traders. In August 2010, McDonald's became the first foreign company to issue such a bond in Hong Kong, followed by Caterpillar, a Macau casino operator and a Russian bank. To date, 33 deals raised a cumulative sum of about CNY42.5 billion. Analysts estimate the outstanding could reach CNY 80 to 100 billion by the end of 2011.

Despite the rapid growth of CNH bonds, demand for them already far exceeds the supply of new issues. As a result, the cost of CNY capital is less than half of what it is onshore. On average, dim sum bond issuers save 197 basis points in interest payments by issuing in Hong Kong rather than in Shanghai. Dim sum bonds pay an average yield of about 1.83 percent, according to the Hong Kong's Treasury Markets Association, while Bloomberg reports that the average yield paid on three-to five-year bonds sold by government-linked companies in China is 3.8 percent.

The pace picked up a bit in early 2011, but the bigger story may be "synthetic CNY bonds," by which investors buy the bonds with USD and are paid back in CNY. In January, there have been more synthetic CNY issues than all last year and they have raised five times more money than in the dim sum market. This market is dominated by Chinese property developers who choose to raise USD than CNY because they have most likely been approved by the Ministry of Commerce to bring USD back to China. It is ironic that the driver of synthetic CNY bonds is the ease for the issuers to wire USD into China, in order to sidestep the stringent requirements for CNY. At the same time, issuers command lower coupons synthetic CNY bonds than USD bonds, although they forego any gains on CNY appreciation.

New Hedging and Cash Management Tool

The CNH market is not without obstacles. Bringing offshore CNH onshore into Mainland China remains a challenge. CNH can be only wired into Mainland China if the transaction is trade-related. The Mainland Chinese beneficiary must reside in one of the 20 authorized provinces and must be a Mainland Designated Enterprise (MDE). MDEs can settle export and import as well as services in deliverable CNY with offshore trade counterparties. Silicon Valley Bank is ready to quote trade-related and general purpose (non-trade-related) USD/CNH. Trade-related CNH can be wired to onshore beneficiaries subject to documentation checks by the beneficiaries' banks.

CNH for general purpose has traded at a premium to onshore CNY, reflecting the fact that CNH can be used for trade-related settlement purposes and invested in CNH-denominated assets with positive carry. The key driver of CNH premium is the lack of fungibility between onshore and offshore markets.

Companies with potential future CNY exposure related to trade or investment can purchase CNH and deposit to an offshore account as a hedge. Given CNH contracts are settled through the Real-Time Gross Settlement in Hong Kong and cleared by the Bank of China Hong Kong, companies can take delivery of the CNH purchased through spot or forward contracts. An offshore company that exports to China can now invoice in CNH. The company needs to open an offshore CNH account to collect CNY payments. The CNH accumulated can be used for future CNY payments, converted into USD or other foreign currencies, or hold it in appropriate CNH-denominated assets in the short term.

Offshore companies can also hedge the CNH on forward basis if necessary. In terms of liquidity, transaction sizes up to USD 100 million are now common out to one month, and up to $20 million out to three months. Beyond that, liquidity becomes quite thin. Onshore MDEs also have an economic incentive to either collect CNY receivable in a CNH account or bring CNY into Hong Kong before buying USD when the USD/CNH premium is rich.

As the number of MDEs expands and the use of CNY in trade settlements rises, the pool of offshore CNH liquidity will grow. This will give rise to greater demand for risk management and investment products. As a result, the size of the CNH forward and offshore bond market is expected to grow rapidly.

  

  

   

The views expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not reflect the views of SVB Financial Group, or Silicon Valley Bank, or any of its affiliates. This material, including without limitation the statistical information herein, is provided for informational purposes only. The material is based in part upon information from third-party sources that we believe to be reliable, but which has not been independently verified by us and, as such, we do not represent that the information is accurate or complete. The information should not be viewed as tax, investment, legal or other advice nor is it to be relied on in making an investment or other decisions. You should obtain relevant and specific professional advice before making any investment decision. Nothing relating to the material should be construed as a solicitation or offer, or recommendation, to acquire or dispose of any investment or to engage in any other transaction.

Foreign exchange transactions can be highly risky, and losses may occur in short periods of time if there is an adverse movement of exchange rates. Exchange rates can be highly volatile and are impacted by numerous economic, political and social factors, as well as supply and demand and governmental intervention, control and adjustments. Investments in financial instruments carry significant risk, including the possible loss of the principal amount invested. Before entering any foreign exchange transaction, you should obtain advice from your own tax, financial, legal and other advisors, and only make investment decisions on the basis of your own objectives, experience and resources.
 

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