Brazil is preparing to sell up to 5 billion yuan, roughly $735 million, in its first-ever panda bond issuance on China’s domestic market.
Finance Minister Dario Durigan announced the plan during a visit to Beijing on June 25, meeting with People’s Bank of China Governor Pan Gongsheng. The issuance is targeted to land within two to three months, and it would represent the largest debut by any foreign sovereign in China’s panda bond market.
What panda bonds actually are, and why they matter
A panda bond is a yuan-denominated bond sold by a foreign entity inside China’s onshore market. Brazil’s primary goal here is to open a pathway for its private companies to raise funds in yuan, allowing Brazilian firms that do business with China to borrow in the same currency they’re earning revenue in, eliminating a layer of foreign exchange risk.
Brazil becomes the fifth sovereign to tap China’s onshore bond market within the past year. The move also follows Brazil’s successful issuance of euro-denominated bonds worth 5 billion euros back in April 2026.












