Russia Seeks $117bn in HK as Sanctions Hit Bond Issue
Russian banks hobbled by
sanctions are exploring funding sources in Hong Kong to help the nation’s
companies refinance $117 billion in external debt due in the coming year.
OAO Gazprombank,
Russia’s third-largest lender, is applying for licenses to offer securities
services in the city, while Vnesheconombank and OAO Sberbank said they are monitoring opportunities. The yield
on October 2015 yuan bonds of VTB Bank JSC, the
nation’s second-largest, was 8.04 percent on Tuesday,
121 basis points below its similar ruble debt. Moscow
Exchange forecast last week that Russian companies and banks will list yuan-denominated bonds on its bourse.
Russian companies have been
able to win loans from Chinese banks even as U.S. and European sanctions shut
many out of global markets since conflict broke out in Ukraine in 2014. China
is encouraging international issuers to sell Dim Sum notes, denominated in
offshore yuan, as it seeks to make the yuan a rival for the U.S. dollar as a reserve currency. The
renminbi has the second-lowest volatility in major
currencies and is the world’s second most-used currency for trade finance.
“Russian corporates have a
hard time issuing U.S. dollar bonds as several companies are excluded from the
primary market because of the U.S. and European sanctions,” said Victor Verberk, Rotterdam-based global co-head of credit at Robeco Groep NV. “It makes sense
that Russian corporates are looking for alternate sources of funding for their
business. Using the Dim Sum market may be one of them.”
December Rout
VTB Bank was
the first Russian Dim Sum issuer, raising 1 billion yuan ($161 million) in a three-year debt sale in 2010 at
2.95 percent. Since 2012, lenders from the nation
including Gazprombank and Russian Standard Bank have
raised 7.5 billion yuan in the market.
Yuan bonds sold by Russian
companies tumbled in December when the ruble plunged
to an all-time low and oil prices slumped. They haven’t sold any new debt in
the market since January 2014.
Sanctions Impact
“The sanctions are having an
impact in the West and there is thinking that it will be easier to break
through in China, which has funds available for investments,” said Egor Fedorov, a Moscow-based
analyst at ING Groep NV. “State banks have suffered
from a weaker ruble and sanctions and would be
interested in a channel to access hard currency.”
Russian banks will remain
loss-making in 2015, despite a significant reduction in interest rates this
year because of increased provisioning, according to a Moody’s report this
month. Total bad loans will “likely” rise to 13-14 percent
of overall lending over the next 12 months, compared with 9.5 percent at the end of 2014, Moody’s said. OAO Sberbank said in May its first-quarter profit slid 58 percent.
Any issuers may face higher
borrowing costs. The yields on outstanding yuan bonds
sold by Russian companies ranged from 7.6 percent to
8.8 percent, compared with an average 4.3 percent on Dim Sum bonds, according to data compiled by
Bloomberg and a Deutsche Bank AG index.
Higher Costs
Higher costs have also dragged
on overall offshore yuan bond sales. Issuance has
dropped 33 percent in the first seven months from a
year earlier, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
“Russian issuers have been
cost-sensitive and the market is not favorable” as a
whole, said Steve Wang, Hong Kong-based head of fixed-income research at BOCI
Securities Ltd., a subsidiary of China’s third-largest bank.
Closer ties between Russia and
China help. The Asian country was Russia’s biggest trading partner in the first
five months, accounting for 11.2 percent of total
turnover compared with 8.7 percent each for Germany
and the Netherlands. Russia’s trade slid 32.8 percent
from the year-earlier period.