Bonds rise as Indian central bank announces $1.5bn debt purchase

Bloomberg

Sovereign bonds in India rallied after the central bank said it will purchase debt to meet the cash needs of the banking system.
The Reserve Bank of India said it would buy 100 billion rupees ($1.5 billion) of securities with maturities ranging from 2020 to 2033 maturities on May 17. The purchases comes after the shortest bond on sale was rescued by underwriters for a third straight auction. “The announcement should be seen as a positive surprise by the market as it comes earlier than expected and especially amid liquidity surplus conditions,” Vivek Rajpal and Prashant Pande, rate strategists at Nomura Holdings Inc. wrote in a note.
The yield on the benchmark 7.17 percent debt maturing in 2028 was down 10 basis points to 7.63 percent in Mumbai. The rupee lost 0.3 percent to 67.07 to a dollar, its weakest level since February last year.
Surplus cash held by banks dropped to 380 billion rupees as of May 3 from a 1.1-trillion-rupee high in April, according to the Bloomberg Economics India Banking Liquidity Index. The open-market purchases announcement — the first since October 2016 — adds to the measures taken by authorities to support the market. These steps include raising the cap for foreigners, trimming debt sales and allowing banks to spread out trading losses.
Yet, yields surged 37 basis points in April as hawkish central bank minutes with flaring oil prices sparked fears of the central bank to raise rates faster than what most analysts are forecasting.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend