BusinessLine (Mumbai)

Why it is rewarding to persist with liquid and money market funds

RBI holding interest rates and tight banking liquidity driving shorter-end yield curve dominance

- Venkatasub­ramanian K

It has been two years since the Reserve Bank of India raised interest rates. And it has been 14 months since the last hike. When rates hikes stop or peak out, longer-duration debt securities are expected to do well subsequent­ly. Yet, the best returns continue to come from the safest of short-term investment­s and not via longer tenure securities.

Taking the one-year returns for various debt fund categories, money market, liquid and low-duration funds have delivered the highest returns. Banking and PSU debt, and corporate bonds take the middle slot.

The lowest returns in the last one year have been generated by fund categories such as gilt, gilt with 10-year constant maturity, and long- and medium-duration funds.

And, going by the current yields available in the secondary market across diƒerent tenors for securities, it seems likely that the trend will continue for the foreseeabl­e future.

The RBI’s somewhat rigid interest rate stance and the banking system’s tight liquidity may be the prime reasons for the shorter end of the yield curve delivering more.

‘SAFE’ FUND

Money market and liquid funds as categories delivered 7.18 per cent and 7.08 per cent on average, respective­ly, in the last one year. Low duration and ultra-short duration funds managed 6.94 per cent and 6.85 per cent, respective­ly, according to data from Valueresea­rch. These funds typically invest in treasury bills, shortterm government and corporate securities and typically the maturity profile is from a few weeks to a few months.

At the middle of the yield curve, corporate bond and banking and PSU debt funds delivered only 6.46 per cent and 6.43 per cent, which is 4075 bps lower than money market and other funds that delivered well. Corporate and banking and PSU debt funds typically invest in securities with maturities running to 3-5 years on average.

The performanc­e at the bottom rung of the ladder was from long-duration, gilt, dynamic bond, medium duration and 10-year constant maturity gilt funds. These funds managed only 6.13-6.37 per cent on an average in the last one year, a good 80-100 basis points lower than the best performing categories.

SCENARIO TO CONTINUE?

The situation looks like it is set to continue into the foreseeabl­e future as well. Data compiled by Kotak Mutual fund (sourced from Refinitiv) indicates that 1-year AAA rated corporate bonds (CDs), 1-year commercial papers (CPs) and 1-year certificat­e of deposit yields are in the 7.5 per cent to 7.94 per cent range. Threemonth

CPs and CDs also oƒer reasonably high yields.

Thus, money market, liquid, ultra-short duration funds that invest in these securities are likely to yield more for the near future. Given that these funds carry almost no credit risk and also no interest rate or duration risks, investors, including corporates, may continue to evince interest.

Even though inflation has remained under control, the RBI has maintained its ‘withdrawal of accommodat­ion’ stance, which means money supply will be reduced.

For much of the last few months, barring short periods, the banking system’s liquidity has been in deficit. In the latest week, as of last Thursday, the deficit stood at ₹1.77-lakh crore.

The tight monetary stance and the liquidity deficit keep up the pressure mostly on short-term securities, thus increasing the coupons and yields on them.

For investors looking to maintain their emergency corpus or short-term investment­s via debt funds, money market and liquid schemes continue to be attractive.

The Hinduja Group’s IndusInd Internatio­nal Holdings (IIHL) has received the long-awaited nod from the Insurance Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority of India to acquire Reliance Capital.

The acquisitio­n will include the takeover of Reliance Capital’s insurance arms — wholly-owned subsidiary Reliance General Insurance and the 51:49 Nippon Life JV Reliance Nippon Life Insurance.

The insurance regulator cleared the transfer of Reliance Capital’s 26 per cent stake in Reliance Nippon Life to Aasia Enterprise­s. Post the transactio­n, Reliance Capital, Nippon Life Insurance and Aasia Enterprise­s LLP will be the promoters of the company.

The approval is valid for three months and subject to certain “regulatory, statutory, and judicial clearances/compliance­s”. Further, the IRDAI has also sought details of the share transfer post the completion of the acquisitio­n.

The approval has been long pending and crucial to the resolution plan given that the insurance arms are the highest revenue-earning businesses of Reliance Capital.

RBI CLEARANCE AWAITED

Recently, Chairman Ashok Hinduja had said that the Group would make the upfront resolution payment of ₹9,650 crore to lenders within 48 hours of getting the go-ahead.

The NCLT, which approved the RCap resolution plan in February, had set a deadline of May 27 for implementa­tion.

The resolution implementa­tion is now pending the RBI’s approval. The RBI had, in November 2023, approved the original plan of transfer of control of Reliance Capital to IIHL BFSI, subject to a sixmonth validity ending May 17.

The restructur­ing is believed to have been triggered by the IRDAI’s discomfort with the earlier approved ownership structure for the insurance subsidiari­es. The structure had implementi­ng entities — IIHL BFSI (India) Ltd and Aasia

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