The Pak Banker

Nifty Bank index tanked 5pc on NSE

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Banking stocks got the sharpest knock at the bourses on Friday as rising bond yields in India and across the globe pointed at a possible reversal in low interest rate cycle.

At 1:33 PM, the Nifty Bank index was trading nearly 5 per cent, or 1,718 points, down on the National Stock Exchange (NSE) compared with a 3 per cent slide in the benchmark Nifty50 index. The Nifty Private Bank and PSU Bank indices, too, were quoting 4.6 per cent and 3.7 per cent lower, respective­ly.

Among individual stocks, Kotak Mahindra Bank, RBL Bank, and Axis Bank skid over 5 per cent each while Bank of Baroda, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, and IndusInd Bank declined up to 5 per cent. IDFC First Bank, Punjab National Bank, Federal Bank, and State Bank of India, meanwjile, declined between 2 per cent and 4 per cent on the NSE.

10-year government bond yield hardened to 6.23 per cent on Friday, up 0.05 per cent from 6.18 per cent, February 25. So far in the month of February, the benchmark yield has risen nearly 1 per cent.

A rise in bond yield, generally, indicates expectatio­n of an increase in interest rates in the economy on the back of inflationa­ry pressures. In January, CPI-based retail inflation came in at a 16-month low of 4.1 per cet YoY relative to 4.6 per cent in December, 2020 and 7.6 per cent in January, 2020. Core inflation ,however, remained unchanged at 5.3 per cent YoY.

"Although core inflation remaining sticky calls for some vigilance, headline inflation being close to the RBI's medium-term target of 4 per cent is certainly a good sign. Therefore, the RBI's continued guidance to focus on growth - while ensuring headline inflation remains in check - suggests a rate cut is unlikely in the near future," said analysts at Motilal Oswal Financial Services. Those at Emkay Global, meanwhile, said that risks of increasing input costs, higher commodity prices and seasonal upside in food prices and better pricing power remain key risks to inflation.

Against this backdrop, if the RBI chooses to increase interest rates in the second half of CY21 then it would make lending rates costlier for banks. Consequent­ly, the market also demands higher interest costs for the companies that want to issue bonds to meet their financing needs, as well as for the government.

That apart, a rise in bond yields would result in a loss for banks on their bond holdings (investment in government securities) which would be reflected as treasury losses in their balance sheets. To avoid this, banks will simply stop buying bonds which may result in the inability of the government to borrow cheaply in that case.

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