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    Home » Asian infrastructure bank raises US$549 million in Hong Kong dollar bond sale
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    Asian infrastructure bank raises US$549 million in Hong Kong dollar bond sale

    userBy userFebruary 20, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) has completed a public Hong Kong dollar-denominated bond offering, raising HK$4 billion (US$549 million), the multilateral development bank said on Thursday.

    The three-year senior unsecured fixed-rate sustainable-development bonds pay an annual coupon of 3.847 per cent, and will settle locally in Hong Kong’s Central Moneymarkets Unit (CMU), which tracks and manages Hong Kong-dollar debt securities and other financial products.

    The bonds attracted investors domestically and across Asia-Pacific, with the final order book reaching HK$9 billion and more than 25 orders, according to the bank’s official statement. AIIB said the issuance highlighted the opening of the Hong Kong dollar market and offered investors an opportunity to diversify their assets while supporting the bank’s public market expansion.

    Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

    The bonds are the first Hong Kong dollar public bonds priced at a spread to the Hong Kong interbank offered rate – the interest rate at which banks in the city lend to one another – mid swap. This type of large, liquid benchmark bond provided pricing transparency and interest-rate risk hedging, and also adhered to international norms, said Domenico Nardelli, AIIB treasurer.

    “The Hong Kong market is a stable market,” Nardelli said. “We have proven now it also [has] a deep pool of financial liquidity. It’s definitely something interesting for us and our class of issuers to explore further.”

    The offering from AIIB, which has a top rating from all three major credit rating agencies, received orders of more than HK$10 billion at the peak, drawing diverse investors including central banks, bank treasuries, asset managers and local companies, according to Standard Chartered, joint lead manager on the deal.

    “The depth and sophistication of the Hong Kong dollar market make it an attractive environment for issuers like AIIB,” said Darren Stipe, the bank’s head of funding.

    By undertaking a public transaction settled in the CMU, the bank could reach a broader investor base while improving Hong Kong dollar liquidity, Stipe said, adding that the transaction drew 15 new investors.

    “As more local and international issuers look for alternative funding opportunities in the Hong Kong dollar bond markets, we expect to see [that] market [grow further] with a more diverse mix of issuers and investors, strengthening Hong Kong’s status as an international financial centre,” said Jerry Zhang, global co-head of financial institutions coverage at Standard Chartered.

    Issuers including the AIIB and Hong Kong government agencies have made several private placements in the Hong Kong dollar-denominated bond market.

    AIIB’s issuance came a month after Hong Kong’s airport authority raised HK$15.8 billion in the largest-ever public bond offering by a Hong Kong organisation, joining a growing group of borrowers tapping the local currency market amid slower-than-expected interest rate cuts from the US.

    The Hong Kong Mortgage Corporation and the city’s Urban Renewal Authority are among the institutions that have recently made large issuances, launching Hong Kong-dollar denominated notes totalling HK$15 billion and HK$12 billion, respectively, last year.

    AIIB would look to keep diversifying its financing strategy by accessing various markets, including in Hong Kong and mainland China, Nardelli said. The bank’s overall funding plan for this year is US$10 billion-equivalent and it has issued nearly 50 per cent of that target, he added.

    This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2025 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

    Copyright (c) 2025. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.





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