A critical assessment of the South African bond market

This paper looks at the experience of South Africa in the development of its local‐currency, so‐called domestic, bond market. Whilst South Africa had the deepest financial market in Sub‐Saharan Africa it also had one of the shallowest domestic bond markets, until 2009. This changed with the rapid bo...

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Main Author: Sze, Winnie W Y
Other Authors: Biekpe, Nicholas
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/28986
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-289862020-10-06T05:11:38Z A critical assessment of the South African bond market Sze, Winnie W Y Biekpe, Nicholas Development Finance This paper looks at the experience of South Africa in the development of its local‐currency, so‐called domestic, bond market. Whilst South Africa had the deepest financial market in Sub‐Saharan Africa it also had one of the shallowest domestic bond markets, until 2009. This changed with the rapid bond issuances by the national government as a means to fund its expanding government expenditure. The paper finds that the government issuances served to deepen the market for rand‐based bonds and lengthen the maturities of bonds, for the benefit of itself, state‐owned enterprises, and the private sector, particularly the banks. At the same time, it has heightened the risk of negatively impacting economic development. The World Bank and other multilaterals advocate the development of the domestic bond market as a financial cushion against financial stress and as a way to better channel domestic savings towards domestic investment. There is argument that South Africa's domestic bond market acts as a substitute and competition for the dominant bank market. At the same time, given the market infrastructure and regulation, there is also high risk that the bond market could act as a co‐contagion in the event of a bank crisis. There is no evidence that total savings improved as a result of the bond market, however the provision of a long‐term instrument more theoretically suitable to South Africa's specialist pension and insurance funds suggest that the market provides beneficial intermediation. The recommendations focus on mitigating the negative biases of market infrastructure supports and the pension fund regulation. 2018-11-02T09:31:38Z 2018-11-02T09:31:38Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/28986 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Commerce Research of GSB
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Development Finance
spellingShingle Development Finance
Sze, Winnie W Y
A critical assessment of the South African bond market
description This paper looks at the experience of South Africa in the development of its local‐currency, so‐called domestic, bond market. Whilst South Africa had the deepest financial market in Sub‐Saharan Africa it also had one of the shallowest domestic bond markets, until 2009. This changed with the rapid bond issuances by the national government as a means to fund its expanding government expenditure. The paper finds that the government issuances served to deepen the market for rand‐based bonds and lengthen the maturities of bonds, for the benefit of itself, state‐owned enterprises, and the private sector, particularly the banks. At the same time, it has heightened the risk of negatively impacting economic development. The World Bank and other multilaterals advocate the development of the domestic bond market as a financial cushion against financial stress and as a way to better channel domestic savings towards domestic investment. There is argument that South Africa's domestic bond market acts as a substitute and competition for the dominant bank market. At the same time, given the market infrastructure and regulation, there is also high risk that the bond market could act as a co‐contagion in the event of a bank crisis. There is no evidence that total savings improved as a result of the bond market, however the provision of a long‐term instrument more theoretically suitable to South Africa's specialist pension and insurance funds suggest that the market provides beneficial intermediation. The recommendations focus on mitigating the negative biases of market infrastructure supports and the pension fund regulation.
author2 Biekpe, Nicholas
author_facet Biekpe, Nicholas
Sze, Winnie W Y
author Sze, Winnie W Y
author_sort Sze, Winnie W Y
title A critical assessment of the South African bond market
title_short A critical assessment of the South African bond market
title_full A critical assessment of the South African bond market
title_fullStr A critical assessment of the South African bond market
title_full_unstemmed A critical assessment of the South African bond market
title_sort critical assessment of the south african bond market
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/28986
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