Newly Lunched Beijing's Financial Market has begin.
The China Bond Connect programme is open up its financial markets and attract foreign capital.
China's $9 trillion bond market is the third-largest in the world, but only 2% of Chinese bonds are foreign-owned.
The launch has been timed to coincide with the 20th anniversary of Hong Kong's handover to Chinese rule.
Initially,
Chinese bonds can be bought by banks, insurers and fund managers via
Hong Kong. No date has been set for Chinese investment in foreign bonds.
HSBC Holdings and an asset management unit of Bank of China
became the first institutions to trade using the scheme, with about
$300m worth of bonds purchased in early trading.
Rating credibility
Buying
Chinese bonds - essentially Chinese government and corporate debt -
will give investors greater access to investments denominated in the
Chinese currency, the yuan or renminbi.
Overseas investors have
in the past been cautious about entering the market - partly over the
stability of the Chinese currency as well as Beijing's perceived lack of
urgency to reform its financial markets.
There has also been long-held concern about the credibility of credit ratings for bonds in China.
Similar systems to enable dealing in Chinese shares have been rolled out recently.
Since late last year, foreign investors in Hong Kong have been able to trade shares in about 900 firms in companies on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange and vice-versa following the official launch of the Shenzhen-Hong Kong trading link.
That
link followed the launch of the Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect in
November 2014, which allowed international investors to trade in
hundreds of Shanghai-listed A-shares as well as Hong Kong stocks.
Last month, US stock index provider MSCI agreed to include China's mainland domestic shares in its emerging markets index for the first time.
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