Mirae Asset Securities Co. on Monday issued $600 million worth of foreign currency bonds, marking the first foreign bond sale by a South Korean brokerage firm this year, according to investment banking sources.
The bonds, comprised of notes with three- and five-year maturities, were more than 10 times oversubscribed, attracting nearly $7 billion in bids.
They were sold at lower rates than their initial price guidance, easing market concerns about Korean brokerage companies’ exposure to construction companies struggling with liquidity shortages.
Korean financial authorities have launched on-site inspections into derivative product sellers -- banks and brokerage firms -- after they incurred heavy losses and wiped out almost all the savings of some retirees due to a plunge in their underlying assets.
Mirae's three-year bonds were sold at 222 basis points (bps) higher than their corresponding US Treasury yield, with their five-year notes issued at 200 bps above. They were rated triple B.
Mirae Asset's initially proposed spread was 235 bps and 260 bps for three- and five-year bonds, respectively, with yields in line with US Treasuries of the same maturities.
Industry sources said Korean bonds attracted global investors keen to fill the void left by Chinese issuers, which curtailed bond sales, amid the prospect of US interest rate cuts this year.
Citigroup Global Markets, Credit Agricole, HSBC and Mirae Asset’s Singapore subsidiary underwrote the issuance.
Mirae Asset debuted on the dollar bond market in 2018 and has since raised around $500 million in foreign bonds annually, except in 2022.
South Korean companies' foreign bond offerings in January 2024
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