Gulf News

Foreigners dump India bonds at record pace as oil deepens woes

Overseas funds have pulled $4.5b from local debt market since the start of the year

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Foreign investors are dumping Indian bonds at a record pace as surging oil prices threaten to worsen the nation’s finances, stoke inflation and hurt economic growth.

Overseas funds have pulled $4.5 billion (Dh16.5 billion) from the local debt market since the start of the year, the most in any year-to-date period in data going back to 1999. Secondquar­ter outflow was the biggest among the major Asian nations as Brent crude rose above $80 a barrel, the highest since 2014.

Every $10 per barrel increase in oil prices will worsen India’s current-account balance by 0.4 per cent of gross domestic product and raise inflation by 30-40 basis points, according to Nomura Holdings Inc. Standard Chartered estimates inflation to climb 20-40 basis points and the fiscal deficit to widen by 0.1-0.4 percentage points of GDP. High crude prices have also roiled financial markets of other oil-importing nations in Asia, including Indonesia.

Lack of demand

“Concerns about rising inflation and fiscal dynamics, in conjunctio­n with lack of demand from key market participan­ts, have contribute­d to the move higher in yields,” said Stuart Ritson, Singapore-based head of Asian rates and foreign exchange at Aviva Investors, which oversees about $482 billion. “More recently, this has been coupled with a less supportive macro backdrop of a rising dollar and higher oil prices.”

Indian sovereign bonds declined in May for the ninth month out of 10 as overseas investors dumped $2.6 billion of rupee-denominate­d bonds.

The selling spree resulted in the rupee’s worst performanc­e in Asia this year, sliding 5.2 per cent against the dollar. The yield on India’s benchmark 10year bonds rose 50 basis points since end of 2017.

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