China’s biggest banks launch first sales of special loss-absorbing debt

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TLAC bonds are part of push from international regulators to shore up balance sheets

China’s biggest banks have launched their first-ever sales of a special kind of loss-absorbing debt, moving closer to meeting international requirements designed to avoid repeats of the 2008 financial crisis. Industrial and Commercial Bank of China is selling Rmb40bn of so-called total-loss absorbing capacity bonds this week, according to a filing. Bank of China also launched pricing for its own Rmb30bn sale on Thursday.

bonds are distinct from capital instruments such as additional tier 1 debt that are similarly designed to take losses. Fitch Ratings estimated last month that and other capital requirements for the five banks in China could amount to Rmb1.6bn by the start of 2025, but the total amount banks need to issue could be reduced if the Chinese regulator allows deposit insurance funds to count towards the total. Vivian Xue, a director in the financial institutions group at Fitch Ratings in Shanghai, said China’s pilot issuance of

was likely to have been delayed by Covid-19 disruptions as well as “market conditions”. She added that since 2017 most bank capital issuance from China had been within the mainland rather than internationally. China’s financial system during the pandemic became more closed off from the rest of the world, with cross-border activity declining sharply as relations with the US deteriorated. A prolonged property slowdown has also raised concerns about the wider Chinese economy.

’s offering also lists no international groups. China’s five biggest banks all posted profits in their quarterly results last month, as well as flat non-performing loan ratios, though their margins showed signs of pressure. In Europe, losses on AT1 bonds during the failure of Credit Suisse last year led to scrutiny of the regulatory regime and its implications for fixed-income investors. The bank was removed from the FSB’s list of global systemically important financial institutions.

 

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