Panda ‘diplomacy’
Pakistan's inaugural Panda bond issuance in China is a tactical financial success, diversifying funding and offering a lower coupon. However, it doesn't resolve the country's underlying structural debt vulnerabilities or currency risks.
- China's strategic support for the bond.
- Diversifying Pakistan's international funding sources.
- Currency exposure and short maturity risks.
- Pakistan's persistent structural debt challenges.
Pakistan’s inaugural Panda bond issuance in China’s onshore capital market is undoubtedly a financial milestone. Raising RMB 1.75 billion — roughly USD 250 million — at a 2.5 percent coupon with a three-year tenor, the government has projected the transaction as evidence of renewed international confidence in Pakistan’s economic direction. The issue was reportedly oversubscribed more than five times, with demand crossing RMB 8.8 billion.
At first glance, optics look impressive. A country long viewed as financially fragile has managed to access the world’s second-largest bond market at a rate substantially lower than what Pakistan usually pays in dollar-denominated Eurobonds. But behind the celebratory rhetoric lies a more nuanced reality. The Panda bond is neither an economic breakthrough nor a cure for Pakistan’s structural debt vulnerabilities. It is best understood as a tactical financing success rather than strategic debt transformation.
The issuance carried significant institutional support from Chinese financial structures and reportedly had backing arrangements involving the Asian Development Bank and Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. This distinction matters. Investors were not evaluating Pakistan in isolation. They were also pricing in geopolitical considerations, Chinese state influence in the domestic bond market, and the implicit comfort provided by multilateral involvement.
In other words, the transaction says as much about China’s strategic willingness to support Pakistan as it does about Pakistan’s macroeconomic rehabilitation. There are nevertheless genuine positives.
First, Pakistan has diversified its funding base beyond the traditional Western capital markets and Gulf bilateral lenders. Accessing China’s onshore RMB market reduces excessive dependence on dollar-denominated borrowing. In theory, this lowers vulnerability to global dollar tightening cycles and US interest rate shocks.
Second, the 2.5 percent coupon compares favourably with Pakistan’s past sovereign borrowing history. Pakistan’s Eurobonds have often carried yields between 6 percent and 8 percent, and at times much higher during periods of distress. Even the 2021 Eurobond issuance carried coupons of 5.875 percent and 7.375 percent. By comparison, 2.5 percent appears exceptionally cheap.
Third, the Panda bond potentially opens a new financing channel at a time when international commercial markets remain largely closed to Pakistan. Since the near-default crisis of 2022–23, Pakistan has struggled to regain normal market access. A successful debut in China provides an alternative avenue for refinancing and reserve support.
However, the pitfalls are equally significant.
The first concern is currency exposure. Panda bonds are denominated in Chinese renminbi, not Pakistani rupees. Pakistan still assumes foreign exchange risk. If the rupee depreciates sharply against the yuan over the next three years, repayment costs in local currency terms will rise.
Pakistan may have escaped dollar risk temporarily, but it has not escaped external currency risk altogether.
Second, this remains debt — not investment. Pakistan’s political leadership often conflates external borrowing with economic success. Borrowing at a cheaper rate is preferable to borrowing expensively, but it does not fundamentally reduce indebtedness. Unless borrowed funds generate productive export capacity or sustainable growth, the country merely replaces one liability with another.
Third, the maturity profile is short. A three-year tenor means rollover pressures return quickly. Pakistan’s external financing problem is not merely the cost of debt but the constant recycling of short-term obligations. Without deep structural reforms in taxation, exports, energy efficiency and governance, new borrowing simply postpones repayment stress.
There is also a geopolitical dimension. Greater reliance on Chinese capital markets could deepen Pakistan’s financial dependence on Beijing at a time when global economic fragmentation is intensifying.
Diversification is healthy; over-concentration is not. Pakistan must avoid replacing dependence on Western creditors with excessive dependence on a single strategic partner.
Globally, Panda bonds are not unusual instruments. Countries such as the Philippines and Poland have also tapped China’s domestic bond market. But unlike many of those economies, Pakistan enters the market from a position of chronic balance-of-payments fragility and repeated IMF dependence. That changes the interpretation entirely.
Pakistan’s real debt crisis is structural, not transactional. Public debt remains unsustainably high relative to state revenues. Interest payments consume a massive portion of the federal budget. Export growth remains weak and narrow-based. Tax compliance is chronically low. Energy sector circular debt continues to expand. None of these vulnerabilities disappears because one bond issue succeeded.
The Panda bond should therefore be viewed as a useful financial instrument that buys Pakistan some breathing space, modestly improves funding diversification and signals partial restoration of market credibility.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2026
The writer is a former President OICCI; Global Business Leader and Strategic Affairs Analyst