Business World

Yields on gov’t debt rise

- By Mark T. Amoguis Researcher

YIELDS on government securities went up last week as market players stayed cautious ahead of expectatio­ns of a faster September inflation print.

Bond prices dipped as yields climbed by a week-on-week average of 25.29 basis points (bp) week, data from the Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp. as of Oct. 5 showed.

According to Nicolas Antonio T. Mapa, senior economist at ING Bank N.V.-Manila Branch, last week’s trading was largely influenced by expectatio­ns of a faster inflation print.

“Prior to the release, forecasts for elevated levels for price gains may have forced a cautious tone from players while global developmen­ts, in particular surging US Treasury yields, also left traders with more incentive to stay sidelined,” Mr. Mapa said.

Carlyn Therese X. Dulay, first vice-president and head of institutio­nal sales at Security Bank Corp., agreed, adding that: “Another factor was the sell-off in US treasuries on higher services PMI (purchasing managers’ index) with the CT10 reaching a high of 3.22%,” referring to the current 10-year US Treasury bond.

The Philippine Statistics Authority reported on Friday that headline inflation printed at 6.7% in September, picking up from 6.4% in August and the 3% logged in the same month last year on the back of faster increases recorded in the heavily weighted food index as well as the non-alcoholic beverages index.

The latest inflation print was the fastest in nearly a decade or since February 2009’s 7.2%.

The September reading was below the BusinessWo­rld poll median and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) estimate of 6.8%, but still within the regulator’s 6.3%-7.1% predicted range. However, it was higher than the 6.4% pegged by the Department of Finance.

For the year thus far, headline inflation averaged at 5%, above the 2-4% government target. The central bank now expects the inflation to average at 5.2% this year.

At the secondary market last Friday, bond yields rose across the board, save for the three-year debt, which declined by 42.32 bps from a week ago, fetching 6.6107%.

“Client demand on the short end supported the levels on the three-year paper which is why yields dropped on this tenor,”

Security Bank’s Ms. Dulay explained.

The yield on 182-day Treasury bill (T-bill) climbed the most, adding 80.25 bps to end at 5.4516%. It was followed by 10- and four-year Treasury bonds (T-bond), whose rates increased by 53.23 bps and 48.93 bps, respective­ly, to 7.7671% and 7.9357%.

Similar upward movements were seen in the yields of the 364and 91-day T-bills, which added 41.51 bps and 40.73 bps to 5.6911% and 4.7167%, respective­ly.

Two-, five-, seven-, and 20year T-bonds climbed 19.18 bps, 6.23 bps, 3.05 bps, and 2.10 bps, respective­ly, to fetch 6.3908%, 7.1018%, 7.1406%, and 8.3179%.

For this week, Ms. Dulay of Security Bank expects yields to remain within range “with some upward pressure ahead of NFP (non-farm payrolls) data and the scheduled Treasury bill and five-year bond auction, which is expected to fetch 7.10-7.25%.”

ING’s Mr. Mapa added that the Treasury bond auction on Tuesday “will set the tone for the rest of the week.”

The Bureau of the Treasury will offer P15 billion worth of T-bills today, while it will auction off its reissued five-year papers with a remaining life of four years and four months worth P15 billion on Oct. 9.

 ?? Source: PDEx ??
Source: PDEx

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