(FRED DUFOUR / AFP)

Kinesisk bank ställer in ”dim-sum”-betalning

Den statliga kinesiska investmentbanken Gousen Securities kommer inte att kunna betala 43 miljoner kronor på sin Hong Kong-obligation i kinesisk valuta, en så kallad ”dim sum”-obligation. Det rapporterar Financial Times som kommit över dokument.
Den uteblivna betalningen, default, är oväntad.
– Gousen är en av de stora investmentbankerna med en stark kassa och det är väldigt osannolikt med default eftersom den endast är teknisk, säger Beck Lee, portföljförvaltare på Sinopac Securities.

bakgrund
 
Dim sum-obligation
Wikipedia (en)
Dim sum bonds are bonds issued outside of China but denominated in Chinese renminbi, rather than the local currency. They are named after dim sum, a popular style of cuisine in Hong Kong. The first dim sum bond was issued by the China Development Bank in July 2007. Until July 2010, only Chinese and Hong Kong banks could issue renminbi-denominated bonds; deregulation led to the development of an offshore market in renminbi and the internationalization of dim sum bonds. The bonds became more popular as foreign companies sought yuan-denominated assets as the renminbi appreciated in 2011. Although the major market for dim sum bonds is Hong Kong, China Construction Bank became the first Chinese Bank to issue a renminbi denominated bond in London in November, 2012. This followed similar issues by non-Chinese banks like ANZ, HSBC and Banco do Brasil earlier in the year. 35.7 billion yuan in dim sum bonds were issued in 2010 and 131 billion in 2011. The first foreign-issued dim sum bond by a nonfinancial company was announced in August 19, 2010 and issued in September 16, 2010 by McDonald's. On 5 November 2013, British Columbia finance minister Mike de Jong reported a successful placement of Chinese RMB$2.5bn in dim sum bonds, listed January 14, 2014 on the Luxembourg Stock Exchange. The issue was five times oversubscribed.
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