OCBC looking to issue covered bonds

MovieStar

Alfrescian
Loyal
Joined
Jun 19, 2015
Messages
941
Points
0
OVERSEA-CHINESE Banking Corporation (OCBC) is planning a covered bond programme, it told The Business Times on Monday.

"We are looking into the setting-up of a covered bond programme as an option to diversify our funding sources and broaden our investor base," said Ang Suat Ching, head of funding and capital management, OCBC Bank.

Reuters reported on Monday that the bank is targeting a covered-bond issue of US$1 billion in size, and will issue them in the summer, citing sources. OCBC would be the third and last bank in Singapore to do so.

UOB is set to issue a euro-denominated five-year covered bond, reports showed. Asked if OCBC is looking at euro-denominated issues, Ms Ang said: "We will continue to monitor developments of the covered bond market and assess any future issuance of such bonds taking into consideration conditions in the major markets and our funding requirements across the different currencies."

Covered bonds are most comparable to mortgage-backed securities (MBS). Banks can package assets such as mortgages into securities that yield a cash payment, which are then sold to investors. The yield would reflect the credit quality of the underlying assets. The difference is that unlike MBS, covered bonds' assets remain on the bank's balance sheet.

http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/ban...Echobox&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook
 
Covered bonds are most comparable to mortgaged back securities wtf lol.they want to sell us something that caused the 2008 financial crisis,dont they have something else better to compare it with.
 
Covered bonds are most comparable to mortgaged back securities wtf lol.they want to sell us something that caused the 2008 financial crisis,dont they have something else better to compare it with.

Being on banks' balance sheet is a vital difference.. banks have every interest to protect their balance sheets..
 
Our banks in trouble???????

Not in trouble, but market now lacks liquidity. Capital flight from when last QE ended is massive. Countries subsequently embarked on a currency war (devaluation) and that somehow didnt work due to flight back to perceived safe USD$ due to turbulent equities and commodities markets and bleak outlook (SG has worst projected growth in last decade and worst in SEA), so in order to beef up capital, raise funds, etc.. banks resorting to all sorts of ways and means.
 
Not in trouble, but market now lacks liquidity. Capital flight from when last QE ended is massive. Countries subsequently embarked on a currency war (devaluation) and that somehow didnt work due to flight back to perceived safe USD$ due to turbulent equities and commodities markets and bleak outlook (SG has worst projected growth in last decade and worst in SEA), so in order to beef up capital, raise funds, etc.. banks resorting to all sorts of ways and means.

ocbc is a good bank, i expect them to grow gradually. i am buying their issued bonds.
 
ocbc is a good bank, i expect them to grow gradually. i am buying their issued bonds.

Don't know if they ar a good bank:confused:

However I will never bank with OCBC ever again because of my experiences with them. Originally had a mortgage with Tat Lee & when OCBC took over that bank, I became their customer.

I have a Robinson card that was converted to a OCBC VISA card. It's a pain because I have to call them to waive the service charges:(
 
Don't know if they ar a good bank:confused:

However I will never bank with OCBC ever again because of my experiences with them. Originally had a mortgage with Tat Lee & when OCBC took over that bank, I became their customer.

I have a Robinson card that was converted to a OCBC VISA card. It's a pain because I have to call them to waive the service charges:(


under the banking veteran, CEO Samuel Tsien, he will scale OCBC to greater heights.

http://www.ocbc.com/group/who-we-are/leaders-management-team.html
 
Back
Top