Business World

Yields on gov’t debt flat

- By Christine J. S. Castañeda Senior Researcher

YIELDS on government securities (GS) traded in the secondary market were flat last week over inflation results, the retail Treasury bond (RTB) offering, and developmen­ts abroad.

On average, GS yields — which move opposite to prices — grew by 2.59 basis points ( bps), data from the Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp. as of June 8 showed.

“Higher US yields, higher CPI (consumer price index) data and additional supply from the retail Treasury bond offering caused yields to inch slightly higher [ last] week,” Carlyn Therese X. Dulay, head of institutio­nal sales at Security Bank Corp., said.

A bond trader interviewe­d last Friday noted yields tracked the “still elevated inflation print from PSA (Philippine Statistics Authority), while BSP ( Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) Governor remains hawkish.”

For Land Bank of the Philippine­s ( LANDBANK) market economist Guian Angelo S. Dumalagan: “GS yields increased [ last] week due to better-than-expected US labor reports and hawkish expectatio­ns on the policy meetings of the US Federal Reserve and the ECB ( European Central Bank). The US central bank is expected to hike rates again by another 25 bps, while the ECB is expected to discuss plans to taper its €30 billion monthly purchasing program.”

“The increase in yields was capped by last month’s weakerthan­expected domestic inflation and renewed geopolitic­al concerns ahead of the meeting between the US and North Korea and among G7 members,” he added. In a report released last week, the PSA said that inflation rose to 4.6% in May, the fastest in at least five years. This was slower than the 4.9% median in a BusinessWo­rld poll which was also the estimate given by the Department of Finance. May’s pace matched the floor of the BSP’s 4.6- 5.4% estimate range for the month.

Meanwhile, the government raised P121.77 billion from the sale of three-year RTBs maturing in 2021 at a coupon rate of 4.875%.

At the secondary market on Friday, in the short end of the curve, the 91- day and 182- day Treasury bills ( T- bills) went down by 49.27 bps and 1.54 bps to yield 3.2680% and 3.6216%, respective­ly. The 364-day paper increased 6.08 basis points to 4.1787%.

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