China is taking another swing at putting its currency on the global green bond map.
The Ministry of Finance said Tuesday it will sell up to 6 billion yuan of green sovereign bonds in Hong Kong the week of May 25. That works out to about $877 million.
The Mechanics
The deal comes in two pieces. There's a 3-year piece and a 5-year piece, per a term sheet seen by Reuters.
The cash will go toward green spending lined up in the central budget.
Final pricing and size will be set just before launch.
Hong Kong is the venue. But the bonds are priced in yuan, not Hong Kong or U.S. dollars.
That detail matters.
Beijing wants more foreign buyers to hold the yuan. The pitch lands best with big funds that care about climate and spreading risk.
This is only China's second offshore yuan green sovereign bond. The first was done in London in April 2025.
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Why Hong Kong Keeps Getting These Deals
Hong Kong has spent the past few years building itself out as a green finance hub.
The city has hosted record green bond sales of its own. It has drawn in Middle East and European buyers and offered tax breaks for green debt deals.
For Beijing, Hong Kong is also the easiest place to sell offshore yuan bonds.
The city has the plumbing in place. It has a deep yuan deposit base, friendly rules, and direct links to mainland clearing systems.
The two-piece setup is meant to pull in two kinds of buyers.
The 3-year piece appeals to short-end cash funds. The 5-year piece is for longer green funds.
Splitting it lets China test demand at each tenor without going all-in on either.
The pitch is part green finance, part yuan push.
What To Watch
Look at where each piece prices versus other yuan bond benchmarks.
Tight pricing would signal strong global demand for yuan debt. Wider pricing would mean buyers still want a premium for risk.
Why it matters: Each sale is a small step in the long project of getting the yuan into more global portfolios. The green label just makes the pitch easier to sell.
Beijing has been clear that it wants the yuan to play a bigger role in global trade. The same goes for savings.
Hong Kong sales like this one are a low-friction way to test that demand each year. Each deal adds up.
For U.S. investors, this is one more sign that the dollar is no longer the only game in town for sovereign green debt.
Europe, China, and big sellers in the Gulf are all pushing into the same space. Each new deal makes the field a little more crowded.
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