East Asia's local bond markets grow 12.1% on high corporate sales

Last updated: June 4, 2013
Manila, Philippines (BBN)- Emerging East Asia’s local currency bond markets expanded 12.1 percent year-on-year to $6.7 trillion at the end of March 2013, driven by double-digit growth in corporate bonds, according to the latest edition of the Asian Development Bank’s (ADB) Asia Bond Monitor.
 
The quarterly Asia Bond Monitor assesses the bond markets of the PRC; Hong Kong, China; Indonesia; the Republic of Korea; Malaysia; the Philippines; Singapore; Thailand; and Viet Nam.
 
The region’s local currency bond markets now constitute a larger portion of their economies than they did three months or even a year ago, at 54.8 percent of gross domestic product at the end of March, versus 54.6 percent at the end of December 2012 and 52.8 percent at the end of March 2012.
 
The region’s corporate bond market expanded 19.5 percent year-on-year and 4.6 percent quarter-on-quarter to $2.4 trillion at the end of March. Meanwhile, the government bond market grew at a more modest annual pace of 8.3 percent and a quarterly rate of 2.0 percent to $4.3 trillion.
 
Indonesia had the fastest growing corporate bond market in the region during the first quarter, expanding 26.9 percent year-on-year to $20 billion, followed by the
People’s Republic of China (PRC), which had the region’s largest corporate bond market at $1.1 trillion, up 25.3 percent year-on-year.
 
Viet Nam registered the most rapid year-on-year growth in the government bond market, posting a 64.6 percent expansion to $29 billion, fueled by heavy issuance of treasury, central bank, and state-owned enterprise bonds. In contrast, the country’s corporate bond market shrank 47.2 percent to $1.0 billion.
 
Foreign holdings of most emerging East Asian local currency government bonds continued to rise in the first quarter with yields in the region still more attractive than those in the U.S. and many European markets and on the perception that Asian credit quality is on a par, if not better, compared to advanced economies, said the report.
 
Foreign holdings accounted for 32.6 percent of Indonesian local currency government bonds as of end-March, the largest among emerging East Asian economies. Malaysia followed closely with foreign holdings reaching 31.2 percent.
 
Yields on most government bonds have been trending lower since the end of 2012 in the region as inflation moderates and with policy rates largely unchanged. The only exceptions are Hong Kong, China; Indonesia; and Singapore where government bond yields have risen for most maturities since the beginning of 2013 due to inflationary concerns.
 
“We should see further growth in the bond markets given the region’s economies are continuing to expand and with foreign and domestic investors increasingly comfortable with Asian local currency debt,” said Iwan J. Azis, Head of ADB’s Office of Regional Economic Integration. “Governments and companies are also much better now at managing their debt than they were a decade ago.”
 
BBN/SSR/AD-04May13-10:55 am (BST) 
 
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