India Bonds Rally as $265 Billion Package May See Limited Spend

The yield on the most-traded 6.45% 2029 note dropped 10 basis points to 6%, extending Wednesday’s 7-basis point fall.

(Bloomberg) -- Sovereign bonds rose in India as traders estimated the cash outgo for the government from its 20-trillion rupee stimulus package may be less than previously feared.

The yield on the most-traded 6.45% 2029 note dropped 10 basis points to 6%, extending Wednesday’s 7-basis point fall. The yield on the 7.57% 2033 debt, an auction bond for Friday, declined six basis points.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman Wednesday announced the first component of the package that will provide $72 billion in liquidity to small businesses and power utilities. Initial details on the spending don’t point to a significant boost to the government’s ramped-up borrowing plan, according to Bloomberg Economics’ Abhishek Gupta. New expenditure amounts to 1.6 trillion rupees for fiscal 2021 from the 13.4 trillion rupees stimulus already announced, he said.

“Bond traders are hoping that any further borrowing will be contained,” said Debendra Dash, a trader at AU Small Finance Bank Ltd. in Mumbai. “The market is also expecting RBI action in some form whether via open-market operations or Operation Twist.”

READ: Operation Twist May Be Antidote for India’s Steepening Curve

Yields on 2029 bonds jumped 19 basis points on Monday after authorities raised the borrowing by 54% to 12 trillion rupees. Subsequent announcement of the stimulus by Prime Minister Narendra Modi led to concerns that even enlarged bond sale won’t be enough to meet the revenue shortfall and fund the relief package.

The market will be able to absorb the more-than-50% spike in government borrowings announced last week, Sanjeev Sanyal, principal economic adviser in the finance ministry, said in an interview to BloombergQuint.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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