Market is waiting for the Budget to get more clarity on numbers, say experts.
Business
Standard : The yield on the 10-year government bond has moved
up about 30 basis points (bps) since the December 5 rate pause by the
Reserve
Bank of India (RBI) and, like the central bank, the bond market
is also waiting for the Union Budget in February to get more clarity
on numbers.
The
bond yield closed at 6.80 per cent on Monday, as against 6.47 per
cent on December 4.
“The
market is expecting more clarity in the upcoming Budget to gauge the
fiscal position of the government," said Hemal Doshi,
vice-president — treasury at SBI DFHI, a primary dealer.
Till
further cues, the 10-year bond yields should remain range-bound
within 6.75-6.85 per cent, market participants, including Doshi,
said.
B
Prasanna, head of global markets and proprietary trading group at
ICICI Bank, said the yield movement in the 10-year bonds had been
enough for now and it should consolidate around the present level.
However,
that would also mean that the 135-bp rate cut since February, which
resulted in 137-bp transmission in money market rates and about 87-bp
transmission in the 10-year bond yields, has reversed by at least 30
bps.
An
elevated yield level also makes borrowing by the government costly,
as it would likely hit the market with extra borrowing, unless it
cuts its expenditure drastically to balance out low revenue
collection from taxes.
At
a time of growth slowdown, when the central bank and the government
want banks to pass on rates, banks will also have no obligation to
cut their rates if the underlying market instrument moves up and
small savings certificates continue to offer high interest rates.
“There
will be no transmission in lending rate as banks are unlikely to cut
deposit rates any further,” said a senior banker, requesting
anonymity. The rise in yields would also be a bit uncomfortable for
bank treasuries as they were betting on a handsome return on their
bond portfolio. As yields rise, prices of bonds fall. However, that
doesn’t mean that banks would be incurring losses.
“In
a shorter tenure, banks would still be ‘in the money’, whereas
for a longer tenure, banks would be somewhat ‘out of
money’...Budget
2020
No comments:
Post a Comment