Russian central bank, sovereign fund may hold $140 billion in Chinese bonds
SHANGHAI : Russia's central bank and sovereign wealth fund
may account for nearly a quarter of foreign holdings of Chinese bonds, analysts
at ANZ Research calculated, potentially offering shelter from Western sanctions
imposed over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.
Russia's financial markets have been thrown into turmoil by
sanctions imposed over the invasion, the biggest attack on a European state
since World War Two.
In the face of those sanctions, Russian companies have been
exploring workarounds with emerging market allies, especially China, with
settlement of transactions in yuan seen rising at the expense of the dollar.
In a note this week, ANZ economists and strategists said
they estimate yuan bond holdings of Russia's central bank and the Russian
National Wealth Fund at $80 billion and $60 billion, respectively.
Foreign holdings of bonds on China's interbank bond market
totalled 4.07 trillion yuan ($644.13 billion) at the end of January, the latest
month for which data is available.
"We are watching if Russia will liquidate the assets if
(yuan) cash is needed to meet other payment obligations," ANZ said.
Yuan accounted for 13.1per cent of the Russian central
bank's foreign currency reserves in June 2021, compared with just 0.1per cent
in June 2017. Dollar holdings dropped to 16.4per cent, from 46.3per cent.
But while Russia could potentially make use of yuan assets and China's Cross Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) to counter the impact of Western sanctions, including bans on some Russian banks from the SWIFT global financial messaging system, the crisis is unlikely to significantly boost use of the yuan, they said.
"CIPS is a mainly a RMB clearing system and more than
80 percent of transactions on CIPS rely on SWIFT telegram. It is not an
immediate replacement for SWIFT."
Underscoring the impact of sanctions over the invasion,
rating agencies Fitch and Moody's slashed Russia's sovereign credit rating to
"junk" status, following a similar move from S&P Global last
week.
Russia calls its action in Ukraine a "special
operation".
($1 = 6.3186 Chinese yuan)
No comments