There's growing expectations that the government will do an accounting sleight of hand to keep its deficit in check: borrow via state-owned firms and issue special bonds.
Bond
traders have one question as they head into India’s budget
2019 on Friday -- how big are the off-balance sheet borrowings?
There’s
growing expectations that the government will do an accounting
sleight of hand to keep its deficit in check: borrow via state-owned
firms and issue special bonds. That’s a concern since total public
sector borrowings have reached as much as 9% of gross domestic
product by one estimate.
“Extra-budgetary
resources are exerting pressure on corporate bond yields because the
government is channelizing a lot of borrowings through state-run
entities,” said Shailendra Jhingan, chief executive at ICICI
Securities Primary Dealership Ltd. in Mumbai.
Prime
Minister Narendra Modi may have few options left as a slowing economy
crimps tax revenue, while investors are already smarting from his
plans to borrow a record Rs 7.1 trillion ($103 billion) this fiscal
year.
State-linked
companies, including the Steel Authority of India Ltd., will probably
raise Rs 1.8 trillion selling bonds
and debentures for the 12 months ending March 2020, documents
from February’s interim budget show.
Some
state firms also issue a class of bonds serviced by the government
where the coupon is accounted for in the budget only in the year when
payments are made. When the debt is redeemed, it shows up as an
expenditure in the budget.
Thanks
to extra-budgetary borrowings, the spread between sovereign bonds and
top-rated state company debt will remain wide at 80 to 90 basis
points, said Gopikrishna Shenoy, who oversees $20 billion as chief
investment officer at SBI Life Insurance Co.
Funding
Subsidies
This
is not the first time that an administration shifted debt from one
hand to another to mask the actual deficit. Ruling parties have in
the past regularly issued bonds for bank capitalization, and oil and
fertilizer subsidies, which were listed as below-the-line items in
federal accounts.
While
Modi has an official fiscal deficit target of 3.4%, it’s probably
in the 4% to 4.25% range once the off-balance sheet items are added,
according to Anubhuti Sahay, head of South Asia economic research at
Standard Chartered Plc.
Business Standard
No comments:
Post a Comment