India Bond Yields Surge Most in Four Months as RBI Drains Cash

India’s central bank drained Rs 2 lakh crore from the banking system on Friday.

India’s bond yields surged the most in four months after the nation’s central bank drained 2 trillion rupees ($27.4 billion) from the banking system at a higher-than-expected rate.

The cutoff for the 14-day reverse repurchase operation was set at 3.55%, 20 basis points higher than the Reserve Bank of India’s reverse repo rate of 3.35%, and 3.5% forecast by seven traders in a Bloomberg News survey. The central bank got bids worth 3.06 trillion rupees, it said.

The cutoff fueled investor concerns that the RBI was signaling higher rates. The yield on the 5.15% 2025 bond was up 10 basis points to 5.33%, taking its advance for the week to 23 basis points. The benchmark 10-year bond rose 6 basis points to 5.95% on Friday, the most since Sept. 10. The RBI announced an open market bond purchase of 100 billion rupees for Jan. 21 after market close.

“A combination of factors weighed on yields including higher cutoffs at the reverse repo, delay in RBI’s open-market announcement and higher U.S. yields,” said Vijay Sharma, executive vice president for fixed-income at PNB Gilts Ltd. Since the RBI has now announced the OMO, long-end yields are likely to go back into the last one-month’s range, he said.

The RBI is draining excess cash after money-market rates crashed way below its 3.35%-4.00% interest-rate corridor late last year, spurring calls from investors to remedy a situation that could distort banks’ asset pricing. Too sharp a rise could drive volatility and raise concerns that the central bank is withdrawing stimulus support.

“The reverse repo cutoffs are a clear sign that RBI wants to align money market yields above the operational policy rate, which is the reverse repo rate, “ said Arvind Chari, head of fixed income and alternatives at Quantum Advisors Pvt. “The cutoffs at the next two to three auctions will be crucial to see if this indeed is the start of normalization of monetary policy.”

Short-term bonds sold off after the RBI’s announcement last week to drain liquidity, as the market interpreted it as the start of a sooner-than-anticipated withdrawal of ultra-loose liquidity accommodation. Borrowing costs for Indian companies also surged, a fallout that the RBI would like to avoid amid a nascent growth recovery. The RBI has since met with bank executives to assure them that easy policy will continue, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

People’s Bank of China, another Asian central bank, too withdrew cash from the financial system for the first time in six months on Friday, after excess liquidity had pushed an interbank borrowing cost to an all-time low.

RBI Said to Assure Bond Investors Over Its Easy Monetary Stance

The reverse repo auction alone may not be enough to support money-market rates given the high level of banking-system liquidity, according to ICICI Securities Primary Dealership Ltd. The RBI may need to provide explain its liquidity normalization process, such as laying out steps and a time table for a reversal of its emergency policy accommodation, economists including A. Prasanna at the dealership wrote in a note this week.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

Get live Stock market updates, Business news, Today’s latest news, Trending stories, and Videos on NDTV Profit.
GET REGULAR UPDATES