Business Standard

Bonds rise on rate cut hopes

- ANUP ROY

Bonds rallied on Tuesday, as chances of a rate cut by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) strengthen­ed after the soft inflation print on Monday.

Retail inflation dipped to 2.17 per cent in May, far lower than the RBI’s own target of keeping inflation at the mid-point of 4 per cent. The central bank, however, expects inflation to rise again to 3.5-4.5 per cent in the second half of the financial year. Of course, this is lower than what the central bank was expecting earlier.

The yields on the benchmark 10-year bond fell to 6.47 per cent intra-day, its lowest since it was introduced in May, but climbed to close at 6.49 per cent. The US Federal Reserve is expected to raise rates when it finishes its twoday meeting on Wednesday.

The yields had closed at 6.51 per cent on Monday. Before the June 7 monetary policy, the yields were at the 6.64 per cent level.

The sharp drop in inflation, which some economists expect to fall below 2 per cent, should coerce the central bank to cut rates by at least 25 basis points in the August policy.

State Bank of India (SBI) Group Chief Economist Soumya Kanti Ghosh expects inflation to fall below 2 per cent for the next two months before rising below the 4 per cent level.

“With real interest rate at a 15-year high in FY17 and inflation near 2 per cent level now, the RBI cannot avert a rate cut in the August 2017 monetary policy meeting. The expectatio­n of a prominent rate cut would become more pronounced if inflation continues to remain benign for a longer time,” Ghosh wrote in his note.

According to Pranjul Bhandari, chief economist at HSBC India, the “lower inflation and unexciting growth print raises the risk of a rate cut in the RBI's August monetary policy review”.

While bond markets also share the same view, but much of the movement in bond yields has already taken place. Now, a more substantia­l yield movement can happen only after any actual rate hike, economists say.

“There is not much of scope for yields to fall further. The treasury bills are trading at around 6.40 per cent level, the 10-year cannot fall much,” said Devendra Dash, head of treasury at AU Small Finance Bank.

Retail inflation dipped to 2.17 per cent in May, far lower than the RBI’s own target of keeping inflation at the mid-point of 4 per cent

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