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Templeton Said to Purchase About $1.2 Billion of India Bonds

Overseas banks buyers of government debt for 11 straight days

Templeton Said to Purchase About $1.2 Billion of India Bonds
Headquarters of Franklin Resources Inc., parent company of money management unit Franklin Templeton, are seen in the early morning hours in San Mateo (Photographer: Noah Berger/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Franklin Templeton Investments bought about 80 billion rupees ($1.2 billion) of Indian government bonds in two days this week, a person with knowledge of the matter said.

The purchases, made on Tuesday and Wednesday, were largely for tenors maturing in 2021-2023, said traders who asked not to be identified because they aren’t authorized to speak publicly. JPMorgan Chase & Co. was the broker which bought the securities, they added.

Foreign funds have been pouring into India, driving stocks to a record and pushing up bond prices, since Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s party won an election in a key state on March 11. Yields on local 10-year bonds are among the highest in the region and the rupee’s rally post the election results has made it Asia’s best-performing currency this month.

Templeton Said to Purchase About $1.2 Billion of India Bonds

“The outcome of state elections, a dovish hike by the Federal Reserve and relatively attractive valuations have been the key drivers of inflows,” said Nagaraj Kulkarni, a senior rates strategist at Standard Chartered Plc in Singapore.

Overseas banks were the biggest buyers of government bonds on Wednesday, with net purchases of about 54 billion rupees, data from the Clearing Corp. of India show. That marked an 11th straight day of net buying.

Franklin Templeton’s Singapore-based spokeswoman Melissa Tan and JPMorgan’s India spokeswoman Mollica Senapati in Mumbai both declined to comment.

The yield on benchmark 10-year government bonds slipped eight basis points in the last two sessions. It rose two basis points to close at 6.83 percent in Mumbai Thursday, reversing early declines, as India was said to be planning the introduction of a new monetary-policy tool in the coming financial year to better manage a banking system flooded with surplus cash. Indian lenders, the biggest holders of sovereign debt, typically use excess funds to buy bonds.

See: Modi Win Lures Foreign Banks to Bonds Just as Locals Flee: Chart

Modi’s majority win in Uttar Pradesh, India’s biggest state, is seen emboldening him to take more measures to spur expansion in Asia’s third-largest economy, which already boasts one of the fastest growth rates among the world’s major countries.

The rupee weakened for a second day, sliding 0.1 percent to 65.53 per dollar in Mumbai. Still, its 1.8 percent advance this month is the best performance in Asia.

To contact the reporter on this story: Subhadip Sircar in Mumbai at ssircar3@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tan Hwee Ann at hatan@bloomberg.net, Shikhar Balwani