Business World

Treasury bonds to fetch lower yields on demand

- Senior Reporter

TREASURY BONDS (T-bonds) on offer this week would likely see yields trend lower amid strong demand, with the government seen to make the award ahead of an expected unwinding of bond holdings in the United States.

Two traders interviewe­d late last week said the Bureau of the Treasury’s offering of reissued seven-year T- bonds tomorrow will likely receive tenders at least 1.5 times the P15 billion to be auctioned off.

The government is looking to reissue the debt papers which were first auctioned off on April 20, where it fetched a 4.5% coupon rate. The notes on offer will mature in April 2024, with a remaining life of six years and eight months.

One trader said demand will be “good” given that the seven-year tenor is not too long, compared to the government’s offering of 20-year notes which fetched weak demand and higher rates sought by market players.

The trader added that there are now muted fears of a fresh rate hike in the US, which will bolster investor appetite for the peso-denominate­d debt papers.

“Recent data from US are usually lower than expected and there’s no worry for inflation yet. They’re looking at a rate hike by the end of year, some even considerin­g that it will be next year,” the trader said, referring to expectatio­ns of policy tightening by the Federal Reserve.

Rates are also expected to have a lower bias as it is seen to track the downward movements US Treasuries, the trader said, noting that only an extremely high turnout of the latest jobs data could drive yields higher.

Latest non-farm payrolls data released by the US Labor department showed that 209,000 jobs were created last month, against market expectatio­ns of 180,000, Reuters said in a report, bolstering the case for future Fed hikes.

The Treasury last dangled seven-year T-bonds on May 30, where it only raised P4.026 billion of the P15 billion it placed on the auction block. It was met with sluggish demand at only P12.851 billion and fetched a higher average rate at 4.519% from 4.484% previously. By Melissa Luz T. Lopez

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