Home / Business / News Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
Market needs good credit rating agencies
Adjust font size:

There are more than 50 credit rating agencies around China. But all the fledgling corporate market in Shanghai needs is a few good ones that can win the trust and respect of both issuers and investors.

 

The multi-trillion dollar bond market in the United States is largely served by no more than three such firms.

 

"What we in China lack is a unified standard of rating that complies with the highest international standards and at the same time takes into account China's particular business conditions," says Yan Yan, vice-chairman of China Chengxin Securities Rating Co Ltd, which is widely considered to be a leader in the credit rating field.

 

"While learning from international credit rating standards, Chinese agencies are also trying to incorporate the different conditions of Chinese companies and industries," Yan adds.

 

Previous efforts by Yan and other credit rating experts to establish such a system received only passing interests from the corporate sector because bond issues were limited to large State-owned enterprises. In addition, the repayment of interest and capital by the issuers of those bonds is guaranteed by banks.

 

Things are changing. Under new rules introduced by the China Securities Regulatory Commission in June, all Chinese corporations that can meet the specified requirements can issue bonds without bank guarantees. At least two enterprises have issued bonds under the new rules and more are expected to come.

 

Such activities have thrust credit rating agencies onto center stage. The role they play is widely seen to be crucial to the development of China's long-term capital market, which is expected to become a major source of funding to finance future expansion of thousands of Chinese enterprises.

 

"The establishment of a sound credit rating system is essential to strengthening the infrastructure of the bond market," says Li Fei, an economist at KBC Goldstate Asset Management in Shanghai.

 

 

Analysts say further efforts should be made to associate credit ratings with the pricing of corporate bonds because in mature markets, the ratings from an independent third party are decisive in setting the coupon levels of corporate bonds.

 

"The corporate bonds issued that are guaranteed by banks cannot truly reflect the credit status of the issuers and undermines the market mechanism in the allocation of credit and prevents the credit market from pricing risks effectively," says Li of KBC.

 

To date nearly all corporate bond issues in China came from large State-owned enterprises that have the highest rating of AAA. In nearly all cases, credit risks are borne by the banks rather than investors.

 

Follow-up ratings have yet to be developed after a company issues an initial corporate bond. It has prevented investors from making longer-term assessments of a company's credit status and building awareness of the potential credit risks involved, analysts say.

 

According to common international practice, the default rate in a bond market is widely accepted as a barometer in assessing the accuracy of credit ratings. But analysts say at the present stage of development, China's debt market is lacking in an objective default rate curve, which has to be calculated by longer-term historical data.

 

"By providing more comprehensive historical market data, the further development of China's bond market itself will in turn promote the functioning of the credit rating system," says Yan of China Chengxin.

 

Bond experts and analysts advise the inclusion of corporate bonds with differing credit ratings to further expand the market scale and attract more investors with varying risk appetites.

 

"China's corporate bond market is not complete without the participation of small and medium-sized enterprises," says Gong Yangshu, a professor on finance of Shanghai University of Finance and Economy.

 

"Compared with the large companies with high credit ratings, small- and medium-sized enterprises have more urgent need for direct financing through issuing corporate bonds."

 

"There are growing numbers of medium-to-small enterprises approaching us to consult with bond issue plans," says Yan of China Chengxin.

 

"With the further expansion of corporate bond market, more and more enterprises with diversified credit ratings are expected to participate."

 

Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), which are the engines of economic growth and job creation in China, have relatively little access to bank loans and the corporate bond market.

 

Despite their critical role in the economy, SMEs for long were forced to rely on retained earnings and informal private financing channels to expand their businesses.

 

Experts and analysts also warn that risk prevention should be put at premium to well protect investors' interest when lower rating bonds are introduced to the market.

 

(China Daily December 3, 2007)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
Most Viewed >>

Nov. 1-2 Tianjin World Shipping (China) Summit
Nov. 7-9 Guangzhou Recycling Metals International Forum
Nov. 27-28 Beijing China-EU Summit
Dec. 12-13 Beijing China-US Strategic Economic Dialogue

- Output of Major Industrial Products
- Investment by Various Sectors
- Foreign Direct Investment by Country or Region
- National Price Index
- Value of Major Commodity Import
- Money Supply
- Exchange Rate and Foreign Exchange Reserve
- What does the China-Pakistan Free Trade Agreement cover?
- How to Set up a Foreign Capital Enterprise in China?
- How Does the VAT Works in China?
- How Much RMB or Foreign Currency Can Be Physically Carried Out of or Into China?
- What Is the Electrical Fitting in China?