Business Standard

Bond yields spike 11 bps after Acharya criticism

Viral Acharya’s criticism on managing interest rate risk has not gone down well with PSBs

- ANUP ROY

RBI Deputy Governor Viral A chary a’ s criticism on managing interest rate risk in banks has not gone down well among most treasure rs, who termed his speech as too constricte­d in its approach. Bond yields spiked 11 bps to close at 7.38 percent, from its previous close of 7.27 percent on Monday.

Re serve Bank of India( RBI) Deputy Governor Viral Acharya’s criticism on managing interest rate risk in banks has not gone down well among most treasurers, who termed his speech as too constricte­d in its approach.

Bond yields spiked 11 basis points (bps) to close at 7.38 per cent, from its previous close of 7.27 per cent on Monday as the markets interprete­d the central bank as not extending support, either by allowing spreading of losses over a few quarters, or through liquidity support, to ameliorate the pain faced by banks due to adverse movement of yields. As yields rise, bond prices fall. Acharya said in his address to Fixed Income Money Markets and Derivative­s Associatio­n, most of the members of which are bank treasury officials. “Interest rate risk of banks cannot be managed over and over again by their regulator,” Acharya said in his speech, adding: “It appears that for most banks investment activity essentiall­y consists of two steps — buying and hoping for the best. But hope should not be a treasury desk’s primary trading strategy.” Asking the regulator to help banks in terms of distress is “akin to the use of steroids.”

“They get addictive and have longterm adverse effects in the form of frequent relapse even though their use may be justified to relieve occasional intense pain ,” Acharya said, while nudging banks to improve their risk management practices and manage duration risk better.

Clearly the bankers were not amused. Under condition of anonymity, bankers said the RBI, including Acharya himself, cannot abdicate themselves from the present mess in the market.

“When the RBI expects banks to reduce the interest rate, it is expected that the RBI manage themarket interest rate efficientl­y. After demonetisa­tion, banks were forced to keep the excess fund in instrument­s yielding not more than 6-7 per cent in the absence of poor credit pickup,” said a senior public sector banker. “The poor credit pickup, current state of the economy, bank NPA … for all these, the RBI is partly responsibl­e. We had not asked them to waive the loss, we had just asked to allow us to spread the losses and that is not akin to administer­ing steroids. If we really have to manage our risks, we have enough and more surplus bond holding, and we can very well stop buying bonds. None of the auctions will succeed,” he added.

In the December quarter, the 10-year bond yields had risen 70 bps, resulting in a mark-to-market loss of ~15-25 billion.

The RBI generally doesn’t allow spreading of losses, and only in mid-2013, it granted banks that option after yields spiked up on taper tantrum talks by the US Federal Reserve.

However, the RBI has time and again helped banks through other measures, such as allowing banks to transfer their market portfolio to permanent basket on an ad hoc basis (and thereby not incurring mark-to-market losses). In 2013, the RBI allowed deferment in recognitio­n of valuation losses by six months. And, of course, the central bank does manage the yields through open market sales or purchase of bonds.

But banks still run to the RBI for relaxation, which the RBI deputy governor criticised harshly. And to some extent, Acharya has got supporters among bankers. “He is right. Banks cannot be running with a begging bowl to the regulator every time. You have to manage your own market risk. And this time, the yield movement was 70 bps, which is not unusual. Truth is, not all banks approached the RBI,” said a banker.

Another banker said the RBI had warned banks about the prospect of inflation spiking in the second half, along with its policy announceme­nts that liquidity would move to neutral. Banks should have been more cautious in handling their bond portfolio, he added.

But the banker also maintained that blaming banks for concentrat­ing on dated bonds is not valid; without banks buying the instrument­s, the government won’t be able to function. “Government­owned banks are also helping the Centre, and the success of the borrowing programme is largely because of us,” said another treasurer.

Banks are the largest buyer of government bonds. The share of commercial banks in outstandin­g government securities (G-Secs) was 40 per cent at the end of June 2017, Acharya said. For public sector banks, the share of investment in G-Secs as a percentage of total investment­s was at 84 per cent in FY17. The correspond­ing figure for private sector lenders was at 82 per cent.

According to bond dealers, yields have moved too fast in too short a period, and the RBI actions are partly responsibl­e for that. The RBI sold ~900 billion worth of bonds through dated securities and sold another ~1 trillion worth of special bonds to remove excess liquidity. And then, the government said it would borrow another ~500 billion through dated securities from the market. These pushed up yields even further.

Meanwhile, the rupee jumped about 55 paise to close at 64.04 a dollar level as trade deficit widened and crude prices rose to a near three-year high. Importers were seen hedging their positions, instead of the recent past trend of seeing exporters hedging, said Harihar Krishnamur­thy, head of treasury at First Rand Bank.

“Rupee should be under pressure, but it will stabilise soon, as exporters would be selling at 64.25-50 a dollar level. There is very little incrementa­l space left for foreigners to put money in debt segment, and that’s why dollar flow would be limited. However, the fundamenta­l story is still strong and fiscal deficit would unlikely cross 3.5 per cent (of GDP) level for the next fiscal year,” said Krishnamur­thy.

 ?? Source: Bloomberg ??
Source: Bloomberg
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