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In a World of Negative Yields, Singapore Still Pays Interest

Singapore is offering a rare opportunity to buy positive-yielding quality bonds in a world that’s rapidly turning negative.

In a World of Negative Yields, Singapore Still Pays Interest
Singapore dollar banknotes are arranged for a photograph in Singapore. (Photographer: Sam Kang Li/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Singapore is offering a rare opportunity to buy positive-yielding quality bonds in a world that’s rapidly turning negative.

The city state, which pays the highest returns among economies that have AAA credit ratings from all three major agencies, will sell reopened July 2029 government debt worth S$2.9 billion ($2.1 billion) on Wednesday, the second-largest amount on record for 10-year tenors.

In a World of Negative Yields, Singapore Still Pays Interest

Singapore isn’t immune to the underlying trends in global bonds and the sale has to overcome the challenge of a yield curve that’s near the flattest on record.

The yield premium that investors receive by holding 10-year notes instead of two-year securities briefly evaporated this month, dropping to minus 1.14 basis point on Aug. 15. That’s the lowest in data going back to 1998 for this spread, which has managed to claw its way back into positive territory.

In a World of Negative Yields, Singapore Still Pays Interest

Size also matters, as Germany discovered last week, when it failed to meet a 2-billion-euro ($2.2 billion) target last week for the world’s first 30-year debt with a zero percent coupon.

But if Australia is any guide, the Singapore auction should see solid demand given the combination of the country’s top rating and high yields.

A flatter curve hasn’t dented investor appetite in AAA-rated Australia, which recently drew a bid-to-cover ratio of 3.69 for May 2030 notes. That was up from 2.67 at the previous offering even as the spread between three- and 10-year yields narrowed to the least since 2011.

Singapore’s July 2029 debt that’s been sold in the past yielded 1.83% in the secondary market on Aug. 22. That compares with 1.64% for 10-year U.S. Treasury notes.

Last Chance

This is the last sale of 10-year notes on the city state’s schedule to date, with the remaining two auctions on the calendar for two- and seven-year debt. An optional “mini” auction is planned in September but the tenors haven’t been announced.

“A lot of investors will be trying to ‘catch the tail’,” said Eugene Leow, a fixed-income strategist at DBS Bank Ltd. in Singapore, referring to the chase for the highest yields possible. “Within the AAA space, I believe 10-year Singapore government securities offer one of the most attractive yields.” he said ahead of a gathering of global central bankers at Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

Below are the key Asian economic data and events due this week:

DATECOUNTRYDATA/EVENT
Aug. 26SingaporeJuly industrial production
Hong KongJuly trade balance
New ZealandJuly trade balance
Aug. 27South KoreaAugust consumer confidence
JapanJuly services producer price index
BOJ underlying inflation
Extra bond auction
ChinaJuly industrial profit
IndonesiaBond auction
AustraliaRBA Deputy Governor Debelle’s speech
PhilippinesThree-year bond sale
Aug. 28SingaporeTen-year bond sale
Aug. 29South KoreaSeptember business survey
JapanTwo-year note auction
Australia2Q private capital expenditure
New ZealandAugust business confidence
Aug. 30South KoreaJuly industrial production
Bank of Korea policy decision
JapanJuly jobless rate
August Tokyo CPI
July industrial production
July retail sales
SingaporeJuly statistical bulletin
ThailandJuly balance of payments
Hong KongJuly retail sales
AustraliaJuly building approvals
New ZealandAugust consumer confidence
July building permits

--With assistance from Garfield Reynolds.

To contact the reporter on this story: Masaki Kondo in Tokyo at mkondo3@bloomberg.net

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

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.