China Directs Bankers to Stop Underwriting Short-Term Local Government Bonds
Chinese regulators told banks to stop underwriting short-term LGFV bonds, a move that cuts rollover risk and supports the credit outlook for existing notes. Reduced supply of short-dated paper could lift prices.
- ▲ Regulators ban short-term LGFV bond underwriting
- ▼ LGFVs shift to shadow banking for short-term funding
- ▼ Directive may be loosely enforced
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How will the underwriting ban affect short-term LGFV bond yields?
Reduced supply of new short-term LGFV bonds could push yields lower temporarily, but the policy may also raise credit concerns, leading to higher yields over the medium term.
Will this policy actually reduce LGFV default risk?
By extending maturities, it reduces near-term refinancing pressure, but it does not address underlying fiscal imbalances; default risk may shift to longer-term bonds.