China mulls doubling Southbound Bond Connect to one trillion yuan
Regulators in the country have held early talks about expanding the so-called Southbound Bond Connect programme to as much as one trillion yuan (S$178 billion), said the sources, who asked not to be identified because the details are private. The expansion would be through an up to 500 billion yuan annual quota to non-bank financial institutions, which are currently left out of the trading link.
Any such move would allow onshore firms to ramp up their exposure to international bonds that are tradeable through Hong Kong's stock exchange, including those denominated in US dollars. The country's biggest mutual funds would be among the firms eligible for the new quota, the sources said.
No final decisions have been taken and any eventual plan would need approval from relevant regulators, the sources said.
The proposal is the latest sign of Beijing's increasing determination to boost two-way flows in its financial market, something that may ultimately bolster the international appeal of the yuan. Chinese policymakers for years kept a tight grip on investments into and out of the country, wary of putting pressure on their currency. But as the US dollar has plummeted this year, they have seized their chance.
The potential doubling of the southbound link comes after a flurry of moves including an expansion of a cross-border payment system, a broadening of the contracts foreigners can trade and a separate move to allow Chinese funds to invest more of their money overseas.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
The People's Bank of China did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Hong Kong Monetary Authority declined to comment.
A Bond Connect anniversary summit will take place on Tuesday (Jul 8) in Hong Kong, though there is no indication that any announcements concerning the southbound programme would be made there.
Currency ambitions
Although any expanded southbound investment link would not directly spread the international use of the renminbi, it could help chip away at one of the main criticisms from yuan sceptics: that China's capital controls mean its market is effectively closed off to the world, limiting the appeal of its currency.
If any expansion were to eventually go ahead, it could also spark stronger demand for offshore yuan-denominated bonds, giving a boost to the dim sum market. Chinese investors can get a big pick-up by putting their money into offshore yuan debt, where yields are frequently higher than the same issuers pay onshore.
China's central bank governor Pan Gongsheng delivered a speech last month outlining what it would take to challenge the US dollar's place at the heart of the global trading system. He suggested a shift away from a global system reliant on the US dollar to one where several currencies play a big role.
Foreign investors can buy onshore bonds through a similar northbound link, which is not subject to a quota.
Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News, provides services related to Bond Connect.
Investors already had a hint that such a move could be coming: In January, the People's Bank of China and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority tentatively agreed to expand the list of eligible investors for the southbound bond link, saying they wanted to include securities firms and insurers.
Bond Connect operates in a closed-loop system, meaning investors are not permitted to buy bonds through the trading link and then use the proceeds from selling them to invest elsewhere outside mainland China.
The annual quota for the southbound link has been unchanged at 500 billion yuan since it was launched in 2021. BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
24 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Shenzhen bourse nudges China firms to speed up IPO applications
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Officials seek to boost private enterprise and reignite the economy under threat from rising US tariffs. BEIJING – China's Shenzhen Stock Exchange has urged brokers to speed up applications for companies to list on the ChiNext board as officials seek to boost private enterprise and reignite the economy under threat from rising US tariffs. The exchange, China's second largest after Shanghai, called in a dozen investment banks to a meeting in June to get them to quicken the pace of applications for companies seeking to sell shares on the tech board, according to people familiar with the matter. At the meeting, the bourse indicated it would expedite the approval process and loosen some requirements, the people said. The regulator aims to ensure that all enterprises that have submitted applications can receive a review and feedback this year, the people said. After a years-long clampdown on share sales and tighter scrutiny of private enterprises, Beijing has shifted its stance as economic challenges, including a trade war, have mounted. Earlier in 2025, President Xi Jinping presided over a meeting with key entrepreneurs including Alibaba Group Holding co-founder Jack Ma, underscoring a softer stance. At a forum in June, China Securities Regulatory Commission chairman Wu Qing said that China will accelerate the development of a capital market better suited to supporting technological innovation and more actively cultivate long-term capital for the market. Regulators are also seeking to stoke share sales on the mainland, as listings from Chinese firms have surged in Hong Kong. The Shenzhen exchange late in June also published rules to make it easier for technology firms already listed on the ChiNext board to raise funds to improve their ability to innovate. China's stock exchanges in Shanghai, Shenzhen and Beijing accepted 150 new applications for initial public offering in June, the highest monthly tally this year. The majority was accepted by Beijing, according to exchange data. Listings in Hong Kong hit the highest since December 2022 in June, as a rally in the Asian financial hub's stocks drove a rush for share sales. Listings in China plunged for three straight years, reaching 222 billion yuan (S$39.5 billion) in 2024, down from 1.24 trillion yuan in 2021, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. So far in 2025, China has seen 114 billion yuan in listings. BLOOMBERG
Business Times
32 minutes ago
- Business Times
Quick takes on Trump's new tariffs: what this means for markets, the dollar, and inflation
[SINGAPORE] US President Donald Trump on Monday (Jul 7) announced tariff rates on 14 countries that will take effect on Aug 1, ahead of a 90-day pause that was to end this week. In April, Trump had announced 'liberation day' tariffs for the US' trading partners but lowered them to a flat 10 per cent for the duration of the pause. On Monday, he started sending letters out to trading partners but indicated he was going to continue negotiations. So far, only deals with the UK and Vietnam have been reached. Trump said goods from Japan and South Korea would face 25 per cent levies. The same 25 per cent rate also applies to Malaysia, Kazakhstan and Tunisia, while South Africa would see a 30 per cent tariff and Laos and Myanmar would face a 40 per cent levy. Other nations hit with levies included Indonesia with a 32 per cent rate, Bangladesh with 35 per cent, and Thailand and Cambodia with duties of 36 per cent. Bosnia received a 30 per cent levy, while Serbia faces a 35 per cent rate. Singapore are among the countries that have not received letters yet. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up How will markets and other players be affected? Here's what analysts said on Tuesday: Vasu Menon, Managing Director, Investment Strategy, OCBC 'The expectations that Trump is once again engaged in a negotiating tactic rather than making serious tariff threats, offers hope to investors. There was no big fallout for Asian markets when trading resumed Jul 8, a day after the White House sent letters to leaders of several countries announcing blanket tariffs ranging from 25 per cent to 40 per cent starting Aug 1.' 'Eventually, the possibility that the tariffs imposed will be nowhere as high as the draconian figures suggested on Apr 2, may bring relief to markets.' Eugene Leow, Senior Rates Strategist, DBS 'US Treasuries sold off alongside stocks as news of the new reciprocal tariffs hit. Market participants were probably too sanguine over the past couple of weeks. News that Vietnam managed to secure a 20 per cent tariff rate lulled the market into complacency and expectations built that any tariffs would be around that level with allies getting a lower than 20 percent rate. Unfortunately, this optimism turned out to be false.' 'Japan, South Korea and Malaysia got hit with a 25 per cent rate. The silver lining is that these tariffs are only going to be effective Aug 1, implying that there are still three weeks for negotiations. Taken together, overly buoyant sentiment has been pared down, but the shock factor is nowhere near as close to what was seen on Liberation Day.' Chua Han Teng, Economist, DBS 'US tariffs on imported Vietnamese goods will be at 20 per cent, which was much lower than the punishing 46 per cent announced on Liberation Day. New duties for key regional competitors (Malaysia: 25 per cent, Indonesia: 32 per cent, Bangladesh: 35 per cent, Cambodia and Thailand: 36 per cent) were also announced on Jul 7. However, uncertainty remains regarding the interpretation of transshipment goods that will face 40 per cent US tariffs.' Maybank 'Notably, China, India, Singapore and Taiwan were some Asian countries not served letters yet. Letters also mentioned that these tariffs would be separate from sectoral tariffs. Trump said that the letters were 'more or less' final offers and that the Aug 1 deadline was 'firm but not a 100 per cent firm'.' 'Markets dislike uncertainty and these measures (and Trump's words) certainly injected a fresh dose of worry which showed up as US equities and US Treasuries (10Y: +4bps) sold off. Currencies largely remained within range, although the euro found some support after the tariff letters.' 'We think that there could be further volatility to come, although we also retain our conviction on our longer-term weaker USD view. Gradually building up a short USD position on rallies in the greenback may be the most sensible and prudent way to express such a view as volatility rises.' Arif Husain, Head of Global Fixed Income and CIO at T Rowe Price 'Crosscurrents from tariffs (upward inflation pressure), US dollar weakness (higher inflation), and possible slowing demand (lower inflation) are buffeting the inflation outlook.' 'But I expect the tariff effects to dominate and push inflation higher in the second half of the year despite a moderation in services inflation.' -Please check back for more analyst takes.

Straits Times
42 minutes ago
- Straits Times
US Treasury Secretary Bessent aims to meet with Chinese official in next few weeks
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that he will meet with his Chinese counterpart sometime in the next couple of weeks. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that he expected to meet with his Chinese counterpart in the coming weeks to advance discussions on trade and other issues between the world's two largest economies. While Mr Bessent did not identify his counterpart by name, the Treasury secretary has engaged in the past with Chinese Vice-Premier He Lifeng, who led his country's delegation for talks in London in June with the US on trade. 'I'm going to be meeting with my Chinese counterpart at sometime in the next couple of weeks,' Mr Bessent said in an interview on July 7 on CNBC. 'I think there are things for us to do together if the Chinese want to do it,' he added. 'So we will discuss whether we are able to move beyond trade into other areas.' China's Ministry of Commerce did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The US and China exchanged crippling tit-for-tat tariffs earlier i n 2025 that threatened to choke off trade, unnerving financial markets fearing the clash would spark a global downturn. Negotiations in Geneva and later in London saw the two nations agree to a truce under which Beijing agreed to ease the export of rare earth minerals critical to a slew of US industries ranging from chips, clean energy and transportation, in exchange for the US lifting some of its restrictions. Those minerals have held an outsized importance in discussions between the countries. Mr Bessent last week cautioned that flows of those critical materials still had not returned to levels seen in April 2025 . Still, the framework between the US and China is far from comprehensive and there remain complicated questions to resolve, including Mr Trump's concerns about fentanyl trafficking and his efforts to secure a deal for the divestiture of the American operations of social media app TikTok from its Chinese parent ByteDance. That deal requires Beijing's sign-off, giving the country a source of leverage to potentially extract concessions from the US on trade and other issues. Mr Trump has said he has a prospective buyer for TikTok – an investor consortium that includes Oracle Corp, Blackstone and the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz. BLOOMBERG