
Moody’s: Chinese corporate bond defaults will continue to rise in 2021
Chinese onshore and offshore corporate bond defaults will continue to rise over the next 12 months due to the country’s

Chinese onshore and offshore corporate bond defaults will continue to rise over the next 12 months due to the country’s

Financial holding companies in China are required to have at least 5 billion yuan (US$731.74 million) in capital, according to

China’s August PMI (Purchasing Manager’s Index) dropped slightly to 51.0 from July’s 51.1, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

The extension of a deadline for Chinese financial institutions to comply with new asset-management rules will probably ease pressures facing

China’s outbound investment continued to decline amid the coronavirus pandemic, said EY recently. The country’s overall outbound direct investment (ODI)

China’s moderate policy support and the lack of a growth target for 2020 suggest that recovery from the coronavirus recession

China said its GDP was up 3.2% in Q2, compared with a year ago. Economists polled by Reuters expected a lower

Listings in greater China grew by 29% and the amount of money raised soared 72% from last year in the

China has already been in recession as the country’s economy shrank in Q2 from a year earlier, said China Beige

While only 15 companies — about 6% —of the 256 non-financial companies Moody’s rates in China have high exposure to

The absence of a GDP growth target together with the announced fiscal support measures indicate that China’s recovery from the

Moody’s Investors Service said recently in a new report that Chinese insurers’ solvency remains strong due to higher earnings from