Business World

Yields on gov’t debt climb amid sell-off in US bonds

- Lourdes O. Pilar

YIELDS rose across the board following a sell-off in US Treasuries (USTs), even as the market is expecting another rate hike from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP).

Bond yields, which move opposite to prices, rose by an average of 14.97 basis points ( bps) week on week, data from the Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp. as of May 18 showed.

“Local bond yields rose [ last] week as 10-year UST continued to rise,” said Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion, chief economist at the Union Bank of the Philippine­s (UnionBank).

“Yields rose as much as 15 bps on local bonds as investors tracked higher UST last May 15. The following day, local bond yields rose further despite continued sell-off in UST with the 10-year UST reaching around 3.11%, up by another 5 bps from the previous close,” Mr. Asuncion added.

On Friday, the yield on the 10year US Treasury touched an intraday high of 3.128%, the highest level since July 2011, Reuters reported. It retreated to 3.060% at its closing.

Meanwhile, local investors are also pricing in the possibilit­y of another rate hike by the BSP.

“It is just a reaction from the recent rate hike,” First Metro Asset Management, Inc. (FAMI) said on the rise in yields last week. “The market is still expecting another round of rate hike from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas.”

FAMI said during last week’s auctions, the Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) “gave in to the higher bid of the market.”

Last Tuesday, the government was able to borrow P11.236 billion via Treasury bills (T-bills) out of the P15 billion it offered as investors sought higher returns for the one-year tenor. Full awards were made for the 91- and 182day T-bills worth P5 billion and P4 billion respective­ly, fetching average rates of 3.451% and 3.934%.

However, demand was low for the 364- day papers as tenders only reached P3.146 billion versus the P6 billion programmed by the government. The BTr only accepted P2.236 billion from investors, capping bids at 4.35%. The one-year paper was quoted an average yield of 4.226%, higher than the 3.986% seen a week earlier.

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