Business World

Gov’t fully awards bonds

- — T.J. Tomas with Reuters

THE GOVERNMENT fully awarded the reissued Treasury bonds (T-bonds) it offered on Wednesday as investors were defensive ahead of the release of April inflation data and the US Federal Reserve’s latest policy decision.

The Bureau of the Treasury (BTr) raised P35 billion as programmed through the reissued three-year bonds auctioned off on Wednesday, with tenders reaching P41.49 billion.

The debt papers, which have a remaining life of two years and 11 months, were awarded at an average rate of 4.598%. This is 34.8 basis points (bps) higher than the coupon rate of 4.25% fetched when the papers were last offered on April 8, the first time the series was auctioned off. Accepted yields ranged from 4.3% to 4.85%.

The average rate for the tenor was also 45.92 bps higher than the 4.1388% quoted for the threeyear debt papers at the secondary market prior to the auction, based on the PHP Bloomberg Valuation Service Reference Rates published on the Philippine Dealing System’s website.

National Treasurer Rosalia V. de Leon said in a Viber message to reporters it is “not appropriat­e” to simply compare the yield fetched at Wednesday’s auction to the coupon seen for the bond series last month as “significan­t developmen­ts” have occurred since then.

“Markets are bracing for a hawkish pivot from the Fed with 50 bps rate hike in tandem with balance sheet reduction to battle inflation,” Ms. De Leon said.

“Onshore, inflation forecast for April is 4.6% and BSP (Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) has issued a warning that it may start hiking this June. Interestin­gly, in 2018, when inflation hovered at 4.6%, the three-year rate was at 4.79%,” she noted.

The first trader in a Viber message said that the average rate was “a bit steep compared to its last traded level prior to the auction.”

“Market submitted defensive bids ahead of the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) meeting results and Philippine April CPI (consumer price index) figure, both due out Thursday,” the second trader added.

The Fed’s policy-setting FOMC is widely expected to fire off another rate hike at its May 3-4 review following the 25-bp increase it made in March.

Fed Chairman Jerome H. Powell has said they will consider increasing borrowing costs by a bigger 50 bps to help tame inflation that has reached multi-decade highs.

Fed policy makers are looking set to deliver a series of aggressive interest rate hikes at least until the summer, Reuters reported.

There won’t be economic or dot plot projection­s at this meeting, but the market will pay close attention to Mr. Powell’s press conference for clues on interest rates and balance sheet reduction.

Meanwhile, inflation likely accelerate­d beyond the central bank’s target in April, analysts said, as food and oil prices continue to climb amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war and agricultur­al damage caused by Tropical Storm Agaton.

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