Sunday, August 1, 2021

Inflation angst spreads to India bonds as Reserve Bank downplays risk

 RBI is widely expected to leave its key rates unchanged on Friday and continue with its easy monetary stance


India’s sovereign bond market is pricing in growing inflation risks, even as the central bank sees the price pressures as transient.

The yield on India’s benchmark 10-year bond jumped 16 basis points in July, the most among similar-tenor notes from other Asian sovereigns, as retail inflation remained persistently above the Reserve Bank of India’s 2%-6% target range.

Still, the RBI is widely expected to leave its key rates unchanged on Friday and continue with its easy monetary stance, as it prioritizes growth after the economy was ravaged by the deadly wave of Covid-19 infections. Governor Shaktikanta Das has insisted that recent inflation readings are only “a transitory hump.” Although, bond investors are skeptical.

The spike in inflation may not be transient and while some lower readings are in the offing, it will pick up from December, according to Marzban Irani, chief investment officer for debt at LIC Mutual Fund Asset Management Ltd. “Yields are already at ultra low levels and need to correct. I see the 10-year going to 6.5% and then even to 7% in a year’s time,” he said.

The RBI, unlike central banks in New Zealand and South Korea, is constrained from taking a hawkish stance as India’s economic recovery is still nascent. Growth showed signs of cooling in June as the slow easing of lockdowns hurt activity. Economists still see consumer inflation picking up pace to 5.7% and 5.2%, respectively, for the final two quarters of 2021, according to a Bloomberg survey.

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