Mint Hyderabad

Bloomberg index to add India bonds, $3-4 bn inflows likely

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number of enhancemen­ts and innovation­s in recent years like the FAR programme, extended trading hours and more flexibilit­y with margin requiremen­ts - that have bolstered bond market access and depth,” said Nick Gendron, global head of fixed income index product, Bloomberg Index Services Ltd.

“These changes, and the ongoing growth of India as a global investment destinatio­n, led us to conclude that index inclusion was an appropriat­e step to take today,” he added.

Introduced in 2020, FAR is a separate channel allowing non-residents to invest in specified Indian government securities without investment ceilings. As of 31 January, 34 Indian FAR bonds of $448 billion are eligible for the Bloomberg indices mentioned above.

Still, India remains excluded from the Bloomberg Global Aggregate and related indices, and Bloomberg said it will continue to monitor related market developmen­ts.

According to Devang Shah, co-head of fixed income at Axis Mutual Fund, the emerging market index tracks assets of about $30-40 billion, and India could see about $3-4 billion of inflows over 10 months.

“While this is a positive developmen­t, the true game changer would be the inclusion in the Bloomberg Global Aggregate index which has an AUM of around $2 trillion and a 10% weight for India could mean $20 billion inflows. I believe inclusion in the Bloomberg Global Aggregate could be the next step,” Shah said.

In January, Bloomberg Index Services began seeking feedback on a proposal to include India’s FAR bonds in its indices, leading up to Tuesday’s decision based on the feedback obtained. Once completely phased into the Bloomberg Emerging Market 10% Country Capped Index, India is expected to join China and South Korea as markets that reach the 10% cap.

Like JP Morgan, Bloomberg will include India over a 10-month period. “The weight of India FAR bonds will be increased in increments of 10% of their full market value every month over the 10-month period ending in October 2025, at which point they will be weighted at their full market value (100%) in the indices,” it said in a statement.

Experts said this inclusion would lead to significan­tly lower inflows compared to the JP Morgan inclusion. “The move is positive for the markets as it will lead to additional inflows. Although the amount expected to come is not large, it is still significan­t from a sentiment point of view,” said Madan Sabnavis, chief economist, Bank of Baroda.

 ?? ?? Like JP Morgan, Bloomberg will include India over a 10-month period.
Like JP Morgan, Bloomberg will include India over a 10-month period.

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