India 10-yr bond yield to dip on high chance of RBI stance change -PNB Gilts' Goel

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
By Dharamraj Dhutia MUMBAI, Feb 2 (Reuters) - India's benchmark bond yield could break the key 7.25% handle due to the high likelihood of the central bank changing its policy stance to neutral after hiking interest rates once last time next week, the top official of PNB Gilts said on Thursday. However, the Reserve Bank of India will have to resume its bond purchases next financial year to ensure a smooth completion of the government's borrowing programme, said Vikas Goel, managing director and chief executive officer of PNB Gilts. "There is a very high probability of the central bank hiking rates and changing its stance to neutral. And, if this happens, the benchmark bond yield may test 7.10%-7.15% levels," he said. The RBI has raised the repo rate by 225 basis points since May 2022, to fight inflation, which finally came within its tolerance range in the last two months of 2022. The central bank is expected to hike rates by 25 basis points (bps) at its next meeting on Feb. 6-8, but the key for the market will be officials' stance on the terminal rate. "Till then, the technical level of 7.25% is unlikely to be broken," said Goel. The benchmark 7.26% 2032 bond yield was last at 7.27%, down 13 bps from recent highs as the government's gross borrowing target of 15.43 trillion rupees ($188.43 billion) for the next fiscal was lower than estimates of 16 trillion rupees. OMO PURCHASES MUST Goel also expects demand from insurance companies, which has supported long-tenor bond yields, to slow next fiscal due to weaker inflows, meaning the central bank will have to step in to absorb supply. "In the absence of a new set of buyers, the RBI will have to absorb at least two trillion rupees to three trillion rupees." The RBI stopped bond purchases in October 2021 when it began rolling back pandemic-era stimulus measures. In fact, the central bank has net sold bonds worth 334 billion rupees in the secondary market so far this fiscal. The government, on Wednesday, announced taxes upon maturity of certain high-value life insurance policies issued from April onwards. That move, combined with the government's push towards filing personal income tax returns under a new regime, in which premiums on insurance policies are not deductible, could limit the inflows into insurance schemes. "Insurance companies bailed out government bond supply in the current year. But for the next year, we do not see any value for bonds above the 10-year part of the curve," said Goel. "The curve will start steepening from the 10-year point once fresh supply starts." The 14-year 7.41% 2036 bond yield was last at 7.36%, while the 30-year and 40-year bond yields were around 7.37%. Goel expects the yields of 10-year-plus bonds to start rising from April, but said the five-year to 10-year part of the curve may be "relatively protected".


($1 = 81.8870 Indian rupees) (Reporting by Dharamraj Dhutia; Editing by Savio D'Souza)

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