ADVERTISEMENT

India’s Bonds Rally as RBI Surprises With Pace of Purchases

The unprecedented move has put a stop to the relentless steepening in India’s yield curve. 

India’s Bonds Rally as RBI Surprises With Pace of Purchases
The Reserve Bank of India headquarters in Mumbai. (Photographer: Vijay Sartape/BloombergQuint)

(Bloomberg) -- Benchmark sovereign bonds gained in India after the central bank said it will buy long-end debt for a second week, stepping up the pace of its unconventional policy to lower borrowing costs.

The 10-year yield slid 8 basis points to 6.51% at the close, taking the week’s drop to 10 basis points. It touched a three-week low of 6.49% intraday. The 2033 debt yield dropped three basis points.

The Reserve Bank of India is embracing a Federal Reserve-style Operation Twist, where it buys long-end debt while selling short-end bonds after five rate cuts this year failed to lift economic growth. It will conduct a second operation on Monday, following on its first such move earlier this week.

The announcement, which came late Thursday, was earlier than most traders expected, according to Anindya Das Gupta, Mumbai-based managing director and head of treasury at Barclays Plc.

“I think the expectation from Twist goes up to one trillion rupees,” he said. “The back-to-back purchases is probably to pace it if they have to do it over 10-12 weeks.”

India’s Bonds Rally as RBI Surprises With Pace of Purchases

The unprecedented move has put a stop to the relentless steepening in India’s yield curve, as investors dumped long-end debt on concern the government will add to record bond sales.

The spread between the two-year and 10-year debt is down to 69 basis points from 93 basis points before the first purchase under the plan was announced.

READ: Bond Traders in India Now See More RBI Twists to Cool Yields

The RBI will buy 100 billion rupees ($1.4 billion) of 2029 bonds at the Dec. 30 auction, while selling a total 100 billion rupees of notes maturing in 2020.

The operation will flatten the yield curve further, reducing the term premium that had widened amid market concerns over India’s fiscal slippage, according to a Scotiabank note.

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, Ravil Shirodkar

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

Opinion
How To Sign Up For BloombergQuint Story Notifications