Hindustan Times (East UP)

Bond traders see India raising second-half debt sales by a fifth

Govt is likely to lift its borrowing estimate for Oct-Mar period to ₹6 lakh crore from existing ₹5 lakh crore

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Indian bond traders’ worst fears may be realized this week if Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government announces a further increase to its mammoth borrowing plan.

Traders expect the government to lift its borrowing estimate for the October-March period to ₹6 lakh crore ($81.5 billion) from the existing ₹5 lakh crore, according to 10 out of 16 traders in a Bloomberg survey. The timing for this increase couldn’t be worse as the Reserve Bank of India is expected to keep its rates on hold in its next meeting amid a persistent­ly high inflation.

“With no rate cut baked-in, the only thing the market is waiting for is the borrowing calendar, and cues in RBI policy,” said Lakshmi Iyer, chief investment officer debt at Mumbai-based Kotak Mahindra Asset Management Co. “Additional borrowings will definitely spook the market if there isn’t a game plan to support extra sales.”

The additional borrowing could take full-year issuance to a new high of ₹13 lakh crore from the current ₹12 lakh crore target, according to Bloomberg calculatio­ns.

RBI and the finance ministry are likely to announce the second-half borrowing calendar on Wednesday, officials with knowledge of the matter said.

But that’s not all. Additional supply from cash-strapped state government­s is set to add to the market’s debt burden. ICICI Securities Primary Dealership expects states to sell more than ₹6 lakh crore of debt in the second half, double the amount from the preceding six months. Strains on the bond market are becoming evident amid the supply glut, with underwrite­rs having to stepping in to rescue four of the past seven debt auctions.

The benchmark 10-year bond yields are also inching up. It had dropped from a fourmonth high touched in August after RBI bought bonds outright on top of conducting a Federal Reserve-style twist, wherein it simultaneo­usly buys long-term securities and sells short-term ones.

So far RBI has used these measures sporadical­ly to deal with yield spikes, but Bank of America sees it holding $75 billion of open-market bond operations by March to ensure smooth auctions.

Expectatio­ns are for RBI to keep the benchmark yield anchored below 6%, seven out of 12 traders in a separate Bloomberg survey said.

The 10-year yield rose two basis points to close at 6.06% on Monday after climbing by five points on Friday.

However, increasing bond sales may not be the only option for the government, according to some traders. Funds needed to stimulate the economy amid its worst contractio­n can also come from Treasury bill sales, according to

AU Small Finance Bank.

“Unpreceden­ted times call for unpreceden­ted solutions,” said Debendra Dash, who doesn’t rule out a Bank Indonesia-style direct debt monetisati­on by RBI. The government may also delay the potential increase in supply to shied the market from an immediate shock.

Six out of the 16 traders surveyed see the issuance hike coming toward the latter part of the fiscal year, when the officials have a better visibility of revenues while six others expect no change.

 ?? MINT ?? The Reserve Bank of India and the finance ministry are likely to announce the second-half borrowing calendar on Wednesday, officials with knowledge of the matter said.
MINT The Reserve Bank of India and the finance ministry are likely to announce the second-half borrowing calendar on Wednesday, officials with knowledge of the matter said.

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