6 May 2020

Green bond comment, May 2020: Coronabonds

The raft of issuance in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic is another demonstration of how the bond market can be used to help tackle environmental and social problems, says Peter Cripps

The coronavirus pandemic is changing the world in which we live, and it is also leaving its mark on the bond market.

There has been a proliferation of bonds issued in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. (See box below.)

These bonds, which have raised tens of billions of dollars, have come in a variety of shapes and sizes, with a bewildering array of labels and structures. But they all demonstrate how the fixed income market is, with increasing frequency, being used as a tool to solve or combat problems, whether climate change or Covid-19.

I think the green, social and sustainability bond market deserves some credit for this (pardon the pun!).

While many of the bonds issued in response to Covid-19 cannot claim to be social or sustainability bonds, many of them do designate the use of proceeds. This is a practice that has been promoted by the labelled bond market over recent years and is now becoming more widely accepted and expected.

Many actors in the green bond market have long called for the ‘use of proceeds model’ to be rolled out across the entire fixed income market. (For example, see our recent comment piece from Mike Eckhart, one of the original authors of the Green Bond Principles.)

The bond market has therefore evolved over the last decade from being a laggard when it comes to incorporating environmental, social and governance (ESG) considerations, to being at the forefront the financing solutions to environmental and social problems.

Because of the urgency of the situation, many issues lack external reviews. For example, Swedish medical supplier Getinge issued SEK1 billion ($100 million) of commercial paper, pledging to use the proceeds to make ventilators to help patients stricken with Covid-19. Getinge said it believes the notes are in line with the Social Bond Principles, but said it had not had time to obtain a second-party opinion due to the urgency of the current situation. As a result, it has not given the paper a 'social' label – it has instead used a 'Covid-19' label.

Environmental Finance has explored what makes a good coronavirus bond, and whether the rush to issue in response to the pandemic risks lowering some of the best practice in the market promoted by the Green Bond Principles. (See feature here.)

The pandemic is already changing the shape of the labelled bond market. There has been a noticeable tilt away from green bonds and towards social bonds in recent weeks, for understandable reasons.

Figures from Environmental Finance’s bond database shows that green bond issuance has stalled in recent months, but it has been replaced with issues of Covid-19 bonds, which often carry social or sustainability labels.

This could help rectify claims among sustainable finance practitioners that social considerations have been overshadowed by environmental considerations in recent years, and now also need to be given more priority.

The social bond market, which as always being a fraction of the size of the green bond market, could finally be about to have its day in the sun.

Previous Covid-19 related bonds include:

 African Development Bank

 $3 billion

 Social bond

 Inter-American Development Bank

 $2 billion

 Sustainability bond

 European Investment Bank

 €1 billion ($1.1 billion)

 Sustainability bond

 Council of Europe Development Bank

 €1 billion

 Social bond

 Nordic Investment Bank

 €1 billion

 Response bond

 Nordic Investment Bank

 SEK4 billion ($400 million)

 Response bond

 European Investment Bank

 SEK3 billion

 Sustainability bond

 International Finance Corporation

 SEK3 billion

 Social bond

 African Development Bank

 SEK2.5 billion

 Social bond

Getinge 

 SEK1 billion

 Covid-19 bond

International Finance Corporation 

AUD 200 million ($126 million) 

 Social bond

 Cassa Depositi e Prestiti

 €1 billion

Social bond  

 Pfizer

 $1.25 billion

 Sustainability bond

 Kookmin Bank

 $500 million

 Sustainability bond

 BPIfrance

 €1.5 billion

 Response bond

 Republic of Austria

 €7.5 billion

 No label

 The Bavarian government

 €3 billion

 No label

 State of Israel

€200 million 

 No label

Republic of Indonesia 

 $4.3 billion

 No label

 Agence Francaise de Développement

€1.5 billion 

 No label

 Ireland National Treasury Management Agency

 €6 billion

 No label

 

A selection of our articles related to Covid-19 and fixed income can be found below: