Pak Plans Yuan Denominated
"Panda" Bonds
Islamabad turns to ‘panda bonds’ to secure
cheaper credit and diversify its borrowing into yuan-denominated funding, with a
focus on sustainable development
·
The issuance could happen as early as this week and
forms part of a broader US$1 billion panda bond programme.
·
Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb confirmed the
move, highlighting Pakistan’s efforts to diversify funding sources.
·
The three-year sustainable-development bonds will
reportedly carry 95% guarantees from the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank
and the Asian Development Bank.
·
Panda bonds will allow Pakistan to borrow in yuan
at lower interest rates compared with costlier US dollar borrowing.
·
The move marks Pakistan’s return to international
capital markets after years of financial instability and a near-default crisis
in 2023.
·
Pakistan previously secured a US$7 billion bailout
from the International Monetary Fund in 2024.
·
Islamabad also raised US$750 million through
Eurobond sales in April — its first international bond sale in four years.
·
Pakistan is following a growing trend among Belt
and Road partner countries turning to China’s capital markets for financing.
·
Samruk-Kazyna recently
became Central Asia’s first panda bond issuer, raising 3 billion yuan at a
2.18% interest rate.
·
Indonesia is also reportedly planning a panda bond
issuance as part of efforts to diversify financing channels.
·
Analysts say panda bonds are gaining popularity
because:
o
yuan financing costs are lower,
o
the yuan’s international role is expanding,
o
and Chinese assets are seen as relatively stable
during geopolitical uncertainty.
·
Panda bond issuance reached a record 84.2 billion
yuan (US$12.4 billion) in the first quarter, double the level from a year
earlier.
·
Countries including Hungary, Poland, Egypt,
Kazakhstan, Philippines and the United Arab Emirates have issued sovereign
panda bonds since 2017.
·
Analysts view sovereign panda bonds as a sign of
deeper financial cooperation and growing strategic trust with China.
[ABS News Service/12.05.2026]
Pakistan
is poised to become the latest partner in a China-centred trading network, known
as the Belt and Road Initiative, to sell “panda bonds”.
Islamabad
seeks to raise as much as US$250 million through its first-ever sale of the bonds
– yuan-denominated debt instruments sold by foreign entities in mainland China’s
onshore market – as early as this week.
Finance
Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb confirmed on Saturday that Islamabad was preparing to
access Chinese capital markets with the sale – the first tranche of a broader US$1
billion programme that Islamabad has been pursuing since at least December.
The
three-year bonds, focused on sustainable development, will carry guarantees from
the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) and the Asian Development Bank covering
95 per cent of the debt issuance, according to Bloomberg.
The
planned deal comes as Pakistan steps up its return to international capital markets
following years of financial instability. Aurangzeb said the country successfully
raised US$750 million in April through the sale of Eurobonds – international debt
typically priced in US dollars, despite the name. That marked Islamabad’s first
international bond sale in four years.
The
panda bonds would add a yuan-denominated funding source to that effort, allowing
the nation to benefit from lower Chinese interest rates compared with the higher
costs of borrowing in US dollars.
The
structure mirrors a model Aurangzeb flagged in early 2025, when he said that Islamabad
would replicate Egypt’s AIIB-backed credit enhancement to access China’s local capital
markets. He described the move as “absolutely critical” for Pakistan in efforts
to diversify its funding base. Pakistan has faced persistent debt troubles in recent
years, receiving a US$7 billion International Monetary Fund bailout in 2024 after
being pushed to the brink of default in 2023.
The
Pakistan embassy in Beijing did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
Pakistan’s
planned deal comes after Kazakhstan’s sovereign wealth fund, Samruk-Kazyna, last month became the first entity in
Central Asia to issue panda bonds, raising 3 billion yuan (US$441 million) at a
low interest rate of 2.18 per cent. The decision came as global investors seek safe
havens amid geopolitical uncertainties such as the US-Israel war on Iran.
Indonesia
also appears to be eyeing panda bonds, with Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa saying Jakarta
was planning to issue them as soon as June as part of a strategy to diversify financing
sources, according to reports from Indonesia’s state news agency, Antara.
“The
successive entry of Pakistan, Kazakhstan and Indonesia into China’s panda bond market
reflects a clear trend: the market is accelerating towards becoming a mature international
renminbi-financing platform,” said Wang Qian, a senior analyst at Fareast Credit
Rating.
Panda
bond sales hit a record 84.2 billion yuan (US$12.4 billion) in the first quarter,
double the amount from a year prior, according to Bloomberg’s data.
Wang
attributed the trend to various factors, including the cost advantage of yuan-denominated
financing over euro and dollar bonds amid global monetary policy divergence; the
widening use of the yuan as a financing currency beyond trade settlement; and rising
demand for Chinese assets as a relative haven amid geopolitical uncertainty.
“Sovereign
panda bonds can, to some extent, be seen as a barometer of the depth of economic
and financial cooperation between two countries,” Wang added. “In the current geopolitical
environment, such local-currency financing arrangements also tend to reflect a higher
degree of mutual trust.”
Separately,
other nations along the belt and road plan’s trade routes, including Hungary, Poland,
Egypt, Kazakhstan, the Philippines and the UAE, have, as sovereign entities, raised
a total of 26.5 billion yuan through panda bond offerings since 2017, according
to calculations by the South China Morning Post.
Global
investors have increasingly turned to Chinese assets amid geopolitical uncertainties,
with Chinese government bond yields remaining broadly stable within a narrow range
of 1.7 to 1.8 per cent over the past six months.