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Malaysia Bonds Are Rallying But Oil Clouds Outlook

Malaysia Bonds Are Rallying But Oil Clouds Outlook

(Bloomberg) -- Malaysia’s bonds have been the top performers in emerging Asia after the Philippines this month as traders bet on further policy easing, but plummeting oil prices may be about to draw a line under further gains.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year security has dropped more than 40 basis points in April as investors have piled into longer maturities after the yield curve climbed to the steepest in more than three years.

Demand for Malaysia’s debt has been bolstered by expectations the central bank will lower its overnight policy rate by at least another 25 basis points in coming months to help cushion the economy from the impact of the coronavirus. Bank Negara Malaysia, which has already cut its benchmark by 50 basis points this year, next meets on May 5.

Malaysia Bonds Are Rallying But Oil Clouds Outlook

Malaysia’s bonds have so far proved largely impervious to the slump in crude, but this might start to change if it becomes clear the oil glut will prove more than a temporary disruption. Malaysia derives about 20% of its revenue from energy-related sources, according to DBS Group Holdings Ltd., meaning a sustained decline in prices will eventually feed through into its long-term finances.

The government is forecasting a fiscal deficit of about 4% of gross domestic product this year, but this is based on a Brent crude assumption of $35 to $40 a barrel. The London benchmark tumbled to $15.98 this week, the lowest since 1999. The central bank said earlier this month that GDP might contract as much as 2% this year, or grow as much as 0.5%, estimates that are not too distant from those of its neighbors. Indonesia is predicting an expansion of 2.3%, while Thailand has forecast minus 5.3%.

At least in the short term though, the improvement in emerging-market funding conditions bodes well for the nation’s local-currency assets. Hedging costs in ringgit basis swaps have declined from the middle of March, bolstered by the central bank’s reported access to direct dollar funding with the Federal Reserve via a repurchase agreement facility.

These improving conditions may have encouraged the offshore interest that helped Malaysian bonds outperform this month. The surge in demand was also precipitated by surprisingly robust April 14 auction of mostly domestically-held Islamic-compliant 10-year debt. Bids at the offering outstripped supply by more than three to one, leaving behind a reservoir of foreign funds and real-money onshore players who decided to boost purchases of longer maturities in the secondary market instead.

Whether the more positive tailwind from overseas buyers will help offset any impact from the oil turmoil the next few weeks are likely to reveal.

What to Watch

  • It’s a data light week ahead for Southeast Asia, with only Thai current-account numbers due on April 30. Philippine remittance figures remain delayed amid a lockdown which has been extended until May 15 for Manila and some nearby areas.
  • As far as lockdown decisions are concerned, Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha is expected to call a meeting on April 27 to decide whether to extend the emergency decree. Malaysia this week extended its restriction to mid-May
  • Indonesia will conduct a bi-weekly conventional bond auction, with this being the first in which the central bank will directly participate as a buyer. The two previous sales drew lackluster demand with bids surpassing issued amounts by less than 1.5 times. The central bank participated in the first direct purchase via the Sukuk auction on Tuesday
  • Malaysia will hold a seven-year conventional reopening bond auction next week, although the date has not yet been announced

NOTE: Marcus Wong is an EM macro strategist who writes for Bloomberg. The observations he makes are his own and not intended as investment advice

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