By Fiona Law 

As banks world-wide rush to sell a new type of high-yield hybrid security to bolster their cash buffers in response to tightening global standards, one of the biggest buyers is staying away from those issued by emerging-market lenders.

Pacific Investment Management Co. runs one of the largest funds dedicated to buying these securities--contingent convertible bonds, or Cocos--and has been buying from European lenders but not from lenders in developing countries like Russia and China. Cocos carry higher yields than regular debt but holders are among the first to lose money if the issuer's capital cushion falls too low or it needs a taxpayer bailout.

"If you look at some big bank issuers [in emerging markets], there is some deterioration in their fundamentals," said Pimco's global head of financial research, Philippe Bodereau, who manages $5.5 billion of funds focused on debt issued by banks and insurers. By contrast, "in Europe and the U.S., [banks have] spent the last six years deleveraging. They have made a lot of efforts to clear debts and what are left on their balance sheets are relatively low-risk assets."

The rejection by a large fund manager of emerging-market offerings is notable given the surge in these securities: Issuance globally jumped to $138 billion last year, about five times the 2013 total, and two-thirds came from banks in emerging markets, according to Dealogic. This year, sales in emerging markets total $16.3 billion, surpassing the $10.7 billion in sales in the developed world.

While Pimco holds back, other money managers are tiptoeing in, drawn by juicy returns at a time of rock-bottom interest rates world-wide.

"There's nothing cheap about fixed income in the world today...and it makes sense to own some bank capital securities (to enhance returns)," including those issued by Chinese banks, said Rick Rieder, chief investment officer of fundamental fixed income at BlackRock Inc., which oversees $4.8 trillion in assets.

He said contingent convertible bonds have been attractive, "especially in an environment where regulators are [building up] safety to the banking system...It will continue to be a good place to generate yield."

Early this month, China Construction Bank's sale of $2 billion in these hybrid securities drew more than three times the amount on offer from sovereign-wealth funds, insurers and other banks, according to a person close to the deal. Last year, Banco do Brasil SA sold $2.5 billion, while Sberbank of Russia OAO raised $1 billion in February.

Mr. Bodereau is careful of Chinese banks, though rising bond prices show that other buyers are jumping in.

"In general, we are skeptical on the reporting of [nonperforming loans] in China, and our credit analysts spend a great length stress testing balance sheets," he said.

In their latest report, China's big banks revealed their nonperforming loans surged, while they have become more active in disposing of mounting bad debts.

Grappling with mounting bad debt, a slowing economy and tighter regulations, Chinese banks are on track to become the biggest issuers of such risky securities in Asia, following a government-led credit binge to stimulate the economy during the global financial crisis.

Still, Pimco sees "better valuation in DM [developed market] banks alongside better liquidity and stronger fundamentals," and favors capital securities offered by the likes of a Swiss bank and a British bank--it didn't name the issuers--over those from Chinese banks. "The price level of the Chinese deals did not meet our pricing targets," he said.

Write to Fiona Law at fiona.law@wsj.com

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