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MANILA: The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved the establishment of a regional credit guarantee and investment trust fund in Asia to boost long-term investment in the region, ADB announced here Wednesday.
The trust fund, called Credit Guarantee and Investment Facility (CGIF), includes a contribution of $130 million from the ADB, and the combined contribution of $570 million from the ASEAN nations as well as China, Japan and the Republic of Korea (ASEAN+3).
The pilot CGIF, due to start operations in 2011, will provide guarantees on local currency denominated bonds issued by companies in the region. Such guarantees will make it easier for firms to issue local bonds with longer maturities. This will help reduce the currency and maturity mismatches which caused the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis and make the regional financial system more resilient to volatile global capital flows and external shocks, he said.
The local currency bond markets of emerging East Asia have expanded dramatically in recent years to stand at $4.4 trillion at the end of 2009. However, they still only account for around 7 percent of outstanding bonds globally. Moreover, corporate bonds account for only 30 percent of outstanding local currency bonds in the region.
Since the 1997-1998 crisis, governments in the region have been working to expand domestic bond markets, with ASEAN+3 countries launching the Asian Bond Markets Initiative in 2002, and a number of central banks establishing the Asian Bond Fund in 2003 to support market development. CGIF marks a continuation of efforts to promote regional markets in an increasingly interdependent region.
The CGIF will be governed by an eight-member board drawn from contributor countries including one representative from ADB. The location of the trust fund has yet to be decided. Once its $700 million capital has been used up, the board will review CGIF's role, organizational structure and operations to decide whether the capital or 1:1 leverage ratio should be increased.