(MENAFN Editorial) Bridging the information gap: A new voice sheds light on China's bond market
HONG KONG, CHINA - - Jan 26, 2018 - On 23 January 2018, The
Inaugural Pengyuan Credit Conference was held by Pengyuan International at Hong
Kong Four Seasons Hotel, with over 200 international capital markets
participants and the majority is institutional investors. This conference shows
Chinese debt has become too big an opportunity for investors to ignore. Bu the
market's development has come with new demands for data, transparency and
insight.
In the investment arena, information that supports
confident decision-making is arguably the most valuable currency -- and nowhere
is this truer than in China's bond market, which despite its phenomenal recent
growth remains relatively opaque to many investors.
Participants at the recent Inaugural Pengyuan Credit
Conference in Hong Kong made it clear that though awareness of the
opportunities Chinese bonds present is growing, more insight into the market's
unique composition and dynamics will be needed to take it to the next stage of
development. And domestic ratings agencies will have a key role to play in this
process.
As Tony Tang, Chief Analytics Officer at Pengyuan
International, noted, investors frequently approach China's bond market full of
questions. One concern is the gap between domestic, or national scale, credit
ratings (NSRs) and the international, or global scale variety (GSRs) -- and
whether these gaps mean NSRs are not credible.
In fact, "the perception of one being better than another
is unfair," as they serve essentially different purposes, Mr. Tang said. While
GSRs are designed to be comparable across industries and countries, NSR
rankings apply only to the domestic market, and need to be considered
exclusively in that context. Clearer linkages between NSRs and GSRs may be
developed, but this will require new research, criteria and models and is
likely to be a long-term project.
Even now, however, "the relative rankings of NSRs (in China
Market) do carry information about Chinese credit risk, so you should pay
attention," Mr. Tang pointed out. Pengyuan's ratings for example benefit from
the company's extensive investments in technology infrastructure, including a
"crawler" that constantly searches vast pools of data for changes or events
pertaining to Chinese credits. This has created an "early warning system" that
can flag events that may have credit implications, such as a share sale by a
key executive, well ahead of the market.
These tools, combined with an analytical approach that
factors in stress-tested criteria such as likelihood of default, recovery
prospects and credit stability over time, produce ratings that shed light on
the relative quality of Chinese credits, Mr. Tang said. Investors "just need to
be careful with the interpretation."
To
default or not to default
Questions also surround the stability of China's bond
market. In the local government financing vehicle (LGFV) segment, for example
"default or no default" is the big question for 2018, according to Liang Zhong,
Managing Director, Sovereign and Public Finance Ratings, Pengyuan
International. While a real-time poll showed almost half of conference
participants felt it would take more than two defaults a year to trigger
sector-wide funding problems, it also pointed to a hunger for more information
on LGFVs -- particularly on their debt burdens and related liabilities.
In Pengyuan's view, a public bond default this year is
"possible but not probable," Mr. Zhong said. The government is concerned about
rampant LGFV borrowing and could allow a public bond default to send the
message that these debts are not implicitly guaranteed, but is also conscious
that the risks of "shock therapy" could outweigh the benefits, making gradual
tightening more likely.
Perhaps the more pressing question is where a public bond default
may occur -- and this is where regional differentiation based on extensive data
mining is necessary. As local administrations can "window dress" standard
metrics like GDP growth figures, Pengyuan overlays these with additional
calculations and location-specific knowledge to produce more accurate
indicators. "Experienced analysts know where to dig out the information, (and)
how to pull it together to create an insightful picture," Mr. Zhong noted.
Financial
sector in focus
There are also rising demands for clarity on credit quality
in China's vast financial sector, which after an "astonishing" pace of change
in the last decade spans everything from the 'Big 4' institutions to
peer-to-peer lenders. All of these fall on different places on the risk and capital
resilience spectrum, noted Stanley Tsai, Managing Director, Financial
Institutions Ratings, Pengyuan International.
Overall the prospects for the sector in 2018 are relatively
stable; as regulation tightens further growth in the shadow banking system is
likely to slow and more funds flow back from the "murkier" segments of the
industry, such as wealth management products, to "core" parts such as loans.
However, market observers may not be accurately assessing
where the threats to this stability lie. Another real-time poll showed the
audience felt asset quality was the biggest potential risk to Chinese financial
institutions, whereas in Pengyuan's view liquidity is a greater concern --
particularly for smaller institutions.
"Watch liquidity very carefully," Mr. Tsai said, noting a
missed interbank payment by a small city or rural institution would be one key
sign of stress. Again, this requires consistent, bottom-up monitoring of
industry data. If such an event occurs, "what matters will be the direction and
strength of the regulatory response."
Offshore
issuance rush creates risks
In offshore Chinese corporate bonds, 2017 is a
record-setting year, with total issuance surged to more than two-time y-o-y,
according to Winnie Guo, Director, Corporate Ratings at Pengyuan International.
High-yield, particularly property, issuers are rushing to take advantage of
cheaper fundraising conditions, but narrowing yield spread between onshore and
offshore bond markets, argue for a reassessment of risk -- meaning defaults.
While default rates are likely to remain low, the
government's continued push for deleveraging and financial stability make a
certain level almost inevitable in 2018 and 2019. That means the risks around
individual credits should be examined carefully, especially in vulnerable
sectors like property, Ms. Guo noted.
Pengyuan has adopted a unique approach to capturing these
risks, factoring in credit ratios, projected recovery rates, and bottom-up
examination of shareholder structures. Fragmented structures, common among
privatised SOEs, can lead to "hostile acquisitions or management disputes,
which might trigger changes of control and lead to default or near-default,"
Ms. Guo said. These risks "might not be captured by the (standard) credit
rating, and surprise the market from the downside."
Assessing
ABS
Asset-backed securities (ABS) are another segment of the
debt market that has seen "tremendous growth" over the past few years, fueled
by market forces and robust demand, according to Dr. Ke Chen, Senior Director,
Structured Finance Ratings, Pengyuan International. However, this growth has
come with challenges, notably a lack of transparency and information around
this relatively new asset class.
"Due to the short
history of the market, it doesn't have sufficient data to help by models
analyse the risks," Dr. Chen noted. In addition, "performance has not been
tested a stressed credit environment."
Pengyuan is addressing this "information asymmetry" between
borrowers and investors using its data, models and credit analyses. These
assess both quantitative factors, such as recovery rate forecasts, and
qualitative factors like legal and counterparty risks, leveraging Pengyuan's
considerable knowledge and technology resources. This will contribute to both
the development of the market and future stability, since "the market itself
can't address these frictions," Dr. Chen explained. "Ratings agencies should
improve the information quality of credit ratings to help address the
challenges and fill the information gaps between issuers and investors."
What
investors want
A panel of veteran investors from leading institutions such
as HSBC Private Bank, Prudence Investment Management and Income Partners Asset
Management made it clear investors are both conscious of market information
gaps and keen to see them resolved. Vijay Chander, Executive Director, Fixed
Income at the Asia Securities Industry & Financial Markets Association,
cited the lack of transparency and "a formalised bankruptcy process that
follows a debtor hierarchy" as two of the biggest barriers to the bond market's
development.
China's bond market has become "too big to ignore," and can
offer higher yield opportunities, noted Dr. James Hu, Executive Director &
Senior Portfolio Manager at Income Partners. At the same time investors "do
find it difficult to access the market and information, and that's why we need
a specialised team like Pengyuan."
Investors are increasingly looking to domestic ratings
agencies for more than data or opinions, noted Chad Liu, Chairman and CIO at
Prudence. Their real "value adds" are capabilities in analytics, and access to
issuers in a market where connections are important. "This isn't very high
tech, but it's actually very essential."
According to Jonathan
Hu, the Chief Executive Officer of Pengyuan International, "in order to make
your investment decisions, it's best to talk to the local experts." And it is
here where the historically domestic focus, expertise and networks of Chinese
ratings agencies begin to look like a distinct advantage in building and
disseminating knowledge on a rapidly developing market. Pengyuan is one of the
earliest credit rating agencies established in mainland China. During its 24
years history, Pengyuan has carried out over 35,000 credit rating projects.
Based on the extensive database and advanced information capability of its
shareholders, and the professional analytical team that combines international
capital market expertise and Chinese know-how, Pengyuan International is
dedicated to provide creditable and high-quality credit rating service for
global investors.
Pengyuan
International ('Pengyuan Credit Rating (Hong Kong) Co., Ltd'), a fully-owned subsidiary of Pengyuan, has been
granted a type-10 license (providing credit rating services) by the Securities
and Futures Commission of Hong Kong ('SFC') since 2012, and providing Global
Scale Credit Rating.
Pengyuan ('Pengyuan Credit Rating
Co., Ltd') was founded in 1993 as one of the earliest
agencies to engage in the credit rating business in mainland China. As of
today, Pengyuan is the national credit rating leader in enterprise bond market
in China. In December 2016, Pengyuan introduced China Securities Credit
Investments Co., Ltd ('CSCI') as its strategic substantial shareholder.
CSCI ('China Securities Credit
Investment Co., ltd') was incorporated in Qianhai Shenzhen-Hong
Kong Modern Service Industry Cooperation Zone on 27 May 2015. As a nation-wide
capital market infrastructure company, CSCI's paid-up capital reaches RMB 4.586
billion and receives the utmost support from its 33 top-tier institutional
shareholders, including PICC, CPIC, Qianhai Financial Holdings, Guotai Junan
Securities, Haitong Securities, Everbright Securities, Orient Securities,
Essence Securities, Zhongtai Securities, Dongwu Securities, Guoyuan Securities,
Hundsun Technology, East Money, etc.
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