Beijing issued 10.5 billion yuan ($1.7 billion) in municipal government debt on Thursday, [Hong Kong Company Formation & Registration]becoming the eighth Chinese region to issue their own local government bonds among 10 scheduled to do so.
The move is part of a trial launched by the Ministry of Finance in May to allow the 10 local governments to issue and repay bonds on their own in a bid to tackle a looming crisis in public finances and rein in the shadow banking sector that municipal authorities rely on for funding.
Beijing's fixed-rate municipal bonds were issued in three tranches on five, seven and 10-year terms.
The returns range from 4.00 to 4.24 percent, below market expectation of higher costs associated with loans local governments have secured in the past through financing vehicles or State-owned firms.
The funds raised will be used for affordable housing, transport infrastructure and environmental projects, according to Li Yingjin, head of the municipal finance bureau.
Authorities are now looking to build a municipal bond market for local governments to raise funds for infrastructure as the back-door financing widely used by local governments over the years has stoked fears that such unregulated activity may cause systemic risk for China's financial system.
Since the national budget law was issued in 1994, Chinese provincial and municipal governments have been forbidden to borrow any money, except through a separate pilot program launched in 2009 under which the central government issues bonds on their behalf and takes responsibility for repayment.
For years, [Offshore Company Incorporation]local governments have circumvented this ban by setting up companies known as local government finance vehicles (LGFVs) that issue bonds or takes loans on behalf of the local authority.
A national audit released late last year showed that Chinese local governments had a debt obligation of 10.88 trillion yuan as of the end of June 2013. About 40 percent of the debt was raised through LGFVs.
The central government has tried to shut down bond sales and bank borrowing by LGFVs in recent years but that has only encouraged many of them to turn to the high-interest, short-maturity shadow banking sector to remain solvent.
Issuing bonds directly will allow local authorities to better manage their finances and borrow legitimately, said Ye Bingnan, an analyst with the Bank of China International (China) Limited. Unlike in the past when the Ministry of Finance has repayed local governments' debts, Beijing not only issued the bonds itself but will also pay back the debts by itself.
"With the bond issuance, transparent information disclosure and strict market discipline are conducive to restricting overexpansion of financing activities from local governments," said Ye.
Independent bond issuance will be a major financing channel in the future for local governments, [HongKong Richful - Hong Kong Company Formation, Offshore Company Incorporation]which will gradually reduce their reliance on LGFVs, he added.
Zhong Liang, an analyst with Standard & Poor's, predicted that the pilot bond issuance program will significantly change the way local governments borrow in the next three years.
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