From Chinese giants to new frontiers: emerging dollar
bond sales boom
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[September 27, 2017]
By Claire Milhench
LONDON (Reuters) - Frontier economies
including Tajikistan and Iraq along with credit-hungry Asian firms led
emerging market borrowing in the July-September quarter, as 2017 shapes
up to be another record year for debt sales.
Stronger economic growth in the developing world and sizeable inflows
into bond funds have left asset managers eager for new high-yielding
paper, encouraging less frequent issuers to test the market's appetite.
"It's a bit of a Goldilocks scenario for EM issuance," said Regis
Chatellier, sovereign credit analyst at Societe Generale. "For a lot of
countries, they don't know what tomorrow will look like and they would
rather issue now."
The U.S. Federal Reserve has signaled one more rate rise by end-2017,
but subdued inflation means it is likely to tighten gradually,
maintaining a benign backdrop for emerging market borrowers.
Third quarter issuance was running at around $108.3 billion at Sept. 20,
according to Thomson Reuters data, taking the year-to-date total to
$471.9 billion.
This was well up on the $370.7 billion raised in the first three
quarters of 2016, with some issues still in the pipeline for the current
month including a triple-tranche dollar offering from Saudi Arabia that
could top $10 billion.
Governments from developing countries raised some $17.7 billion in debt
between July and September, TR data showed, with Africa, Middle East and
Central Asia accounting for 40 percent.
JPMorgan analysts said they expected a record year for emerging
sovereign issuance of around $142.5 billion.
'HAPPY TO LEND'
Among unusual third-quarter deals was a debut $500 million bond from
Tajikistan, the poorest country in the former Soviet Union, which
attracted bids of over $4 billion.
Iraq issued a $1 billion bond for its first deal in more than a decade
and Ukraine sold a $3 billion bond, its first since a 2015 debt
restructuring.
Gabon also issued for the first time since 2015, following African peers Senegal
and Ivory Coast to the market.
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"The market is now happy to lend to any issuer pretty much," Chatellier said.
Many deals have enjoyed huge order books from fund managers flush with cash.
Year-to-date, emerging market bond funds have attracted $64.6 billion, according
to EPFR Global data, with hard currency funds accounting for $35.6 billion.
Net inflows over the same 2016 period totaled $36.6 billion, of which hard
currency funds attracted $22.1 billion.
Debt sales from emerging market companies totaled $92 billion so far in the
third quarter, taking the year-to-date total to $342.5 billion. Asian corporates
accounted for 44 percent of issuance and China alone 27 percent.
Chinese state-run oil company Sinopec this month sold a four-tranche $3.25
billion bond, following a $3.4 billion deal in April.
"It's all about China once again," said Guy Stear, co-head of fixed income
research at Societe Generale in Paris. "EM companies outside China have tried to
stabilize or reduce their dependence on the dollar market and Chinese companies
have happily wandered into the breach."
JPMorgan said it had revised up its 2017 corporate supply forecast to $440
billion from $380 billion.
Ranko Milic, head of CEEMEA debt capital markets at UBS, said companies were
still keen to borrow while conditions were supportive.
"Base rates in dollars are slowly creeping up but are still very low, so the
yields on offer are still very attractive," he said.
But some new deals were pricing at very tight yields, especially for those
companies known to investors, Milic said, citing the examples of Russian
steelmaker NLMK and KazTransGas, which both came at around 4 percent.
"Given the search for yields, when a Tajikistan comes at low 7s or Ukraine at
7-3/8 – that's where the interest really comes in," Milic said.
(Reporting by Claire Milhench; editing by John Stonestreet)
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