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A Prolonged Rout Looms for India Bonds as RBI Pulls Support

It’s starting to look like India’s sovereign bond market is on the brink of a prolonged rout.

A Prolonged Rout Looms for India Bonds as RBI Pulls Support
Pedestrians walk past the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) in Mumbai. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- It’s starting to look like India’s sovereign bond market is on the brink of a prolonged rout.

Traders have shied away from the long-end of the curve since July on concern the government will expand record bond sales. Sentiment toward the short-end, which closely tracks policy rates, turned negative Thursday after the central bank surprised by holding off on easing.

The decision by the Reserve Bank of India spurred speculation that it has run out of ammunition after slashing rates five times this year. Hopes that the central bank would announce plans to buy bonds were also dashed. Yields on the 2-year bonds jumped by the most in almost three years on a closing basis.

A Prolonged Rout Looms for India Bonds as RBI Pulls Support

“The market has no confidence that the RBI will buy bonds, and on top of that you have the pause, which puts a question mark on rate cuts,” said Rajeev Radhakrishnan, who oversees $6 billion in debt funds at SBI Funds Management Pvt. “It is an additional negative for the market.”

The two-year bond yield jumped 23 basis points at the close on Thursday, the most since December 2016. The benchmark 10-year rose two basis points Friday, taking the week’s gain to 17 basis points, set for the biggest weekly spike since April last year.

The central bank said it resisted pressure to ease further following a recent increase in headline inflation. Governor Shaktikanta Das said the authority also decided to wait and see how the cuts already delivered pan out.

With inflation expected to edge higher this month and the next, the worry for bond traders now is that the RBI may keep rates on hold at its February policy meeting too.

“The key message from the RBI is that there’s limited policy space and it is looking for maximum bang for every rate-cut buck,” Nomura Holdings Inc. analysts led by Singapore-based Sonal Varma, wrote in a note. “The relative underperformance from bonds and wide spreads suggests that market sentiment is already extremely negative.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Kartik Goyal in Mumbai at kgoyal@bloomberg.net

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

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