Why Chinese investors are reviewing bond portfolios as AAA ratings come under scrutiny
In a move that could reshape China’s domestic credit market, domestic investors are reviewing their bond holdings for potential downgrade risks after regulators tightened scrutiny of the country’s large pool of AAA-rated issuers, Bloomberg reported citing people familiar with the matter.Around a dozen institutions, including mutual funds and banks, have begun assessing whether issuers in their portfolios are vulnerable to credit rating downgrades or withdrawals. Some may reduce exposure if ratings are cut after completing their own analysis, the people told Bloomberg.The move follows Beijing’s strongest push yet to tighten domestic credit standards after years of corporate defaults, with regulators asking rating agencies to reassess whether some issuers still qualify for AAA ratings under revised benchmarks.
AAA concentration under lens
China has one of the world’s highest concentrations of top-rated corporate issuers.More than a quarter of the country’s nearly 6,000 bond issuers carried AAA ratings at the end of the first quarter, while another 32% were rated AA+, according to the Securities Association of China. In comparison, fewer than 1% of outstanding US corporate bonds carry AAA ratings, Bloomberg data showed.
More than a quarter of the country’s nearly 6,000 bond issuers carried AAA ratings at the end of the first quarter, while another 32% were rated AA+, according to the Securities Association of China.
Last week, at least 20 Chinese companies withdrew their domestic credit ratings, with most citing “the company’s own arrangements” in disclosures filed on Chinamoney.com. Many of them are local government-backed investment and infrastructure companies.
Downgrades could test bond rally
Analysts said the increased scrutiny could test China’s years-long rally in corporate bonds, which has pushed yields to record lows.Some companies may be withdrawing ratings or delaying disclosures to avoid potential downgrades as annual reviews approach, Dan Jiang, an analyst at Industrial Securities Co., said in a research report.If downgrades gather pace, they could trigger risk-driven selling and make some bonds ineligible as collateral for pledged repo transactions, the report said.
New yardstick for top ratings
The People’s Bank of China, which is leading the effort to reduce the glut of AAA ratings, did not immediately respond to Bloomberg’s request for comment.According to people familiar with the matter cited by Bloomberg, one of the new metrics being considered compares the spread between a bond’s issuance yield and the yield on comparable government securities.Issuers with spreads above 200 basis points could risk losing their AAA status, although any downgrade would also depend on other financial indicators.Chinese regulators have long sought to address concerns that domestic credit ratings are overly generous. Those concerns intensified after a wave of corporate defaults exposed weaknesses in the country’s credit assessment system and highlighted the need for more rigorous rating standards.
