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Khurram Schehzad, adviser to the finance ministry, wrote on X: “The landmark Panda bond issuance attracted overwhelming investor demand of over RMB8.8bn ($1.26bn), resulting in oversubscription of more than five times.” Importantly, he said, the demand for the inaugural tranche alone exceeded Pakistan’s entire planned Panda bond programme size of RMB7.2bn ($1bn equivalent), “a powerful reflection of growing international investor confidence in Pakistan’s economic outlook and reform trajectory.”

Diversify funding sources

The Panda Bond’s real significance is in what it reveals about Pakistan’s evolving external financing strategy. For decades, Pakistan remained heavily dependent on lenders from Western capital markets. The Panda Bond indicates a strategic attempt to diversify funding sources, as stated by Schehzad, to reduce borrowing costs and broaden access to global liquidity pools.

Abdul Rehman Warraich, a former chief of the Debt Management Office and a financial consultant, told Dawn that Pakistan’s Panda Bond programme opens access to another major international capital market, the world’s second largest, at a time when Pakistan faces persistently large external financing requirements. “It is an important step towards integrating the country with China’s financial system. It will help familiarise Chinese investors with Pakistan and gradually build confidence in the country’s economic potential.”