Let’s Bond with Bonds
In the June 2022 edition of the Debt Market Observer – Looking Beyond FED, we made a case that the
inflation narrative has peaked. Market developments since then have made us
more convinced about the inflation endgame.
Commodity Crack
Commodity prices have been softening for the last 2-3 months due to
moderation in the global growth outlook. Lockdown in China and fear of
recession in the US and Europe accelerated the pace of decline in last 4-6
weeks. Prices of most of the industrial as well agricultural commodities are
down upto 50% from their recent peaks.
Table – I: Commodities off peak on recession fears
|
% Price Change from the Peak |
% Price Change year till date |
Thomson Reuters Core Commodity CRB
Index |
-13% |
23% |
S&P GSCI Agriculture Index |
-22% |
7% |
Brent Crude Oil |
-17% |
37% |
Bloomberg Industrial Metals
Subindex |
-39% |
-16% |
Source – Bloomberg, Quantum Research, Data as of July 18, 2022
Our inflation estimates were not based on the highest level of commodity
prices. So this drop in prices may not materially change the inflation numbers immediately.
However, the upside risk to the inflation estimate in this year has gone
down to a significant extent.
If commodities prices stabilize, India’s CPI inflation should come below
the RBI’s upper threshold of 6% by early next year from the current levels of above
7%. Given the synchronized global monetary tightening and slowing global growth,
this seems the most plausible outcome.
Monsoon on Track
Domestically also things have improved for inflation to cool off. After
initial delays, monsoon has now picked up sharply. Total rainfall between June
1, 2022 to July 18, 2022 is 13% above the long term average rainfall during
this period. However, spatial distribution of monsoon is bit concerning as the
monsoon activity is concentrated in the western and southern region of the
country while the north and east parts are still in deficiency.
Table – II: Total rainfall in surplus; but spatial distribution is poor
Source – India Meteorological Department; data as of July 18, 2022 (https://mausam.imd.gov.in/imd_latest/contents/weather_report.php)
Sowing of kharif crops has also picked up along with the
southwest monsoon; though total acreage is still lagging in Rice compared to
its last 5 years trend.
Much of the rainfall in the current monsoon season has
come in the last two weeks. So, the sowing activity should pick up sharply from
here on.
Table – III: Kharif sowing picked
up; still lagging in Rice
Crop |
Normal Total Kharif Sowing Area (In
Million Hectares) for Kharif Season |
Area Sown (In
Million Hectares) as ofJuly 15, 2022 |
||
2022 |
2021 |
%
Year-on-Year Change |
||
Rice |
39.7 |
12.8 |
15.6 |
-17.9% |
Pulses |
14.0 |
7.3 |
6.7 |
9.0% |
Course-cum-Nutri
Cereals |
18.4 |
9.4 |
8.7 |
8.0% |
Oilseeds |
18.4 |
13.4 |
12.5 |
7.2% |
Sugarcane |
4.7 |
5.3 |
5.4 |
-1.9% |
Jute &
Mesta |
0.7 |
0.7 |
0.7 |
0.0% |
Cotton |
12.6 |
10.3 |
9.7 |
6.2% |
Total |
108.5 |
59.2 |
59.3 |
-0.2% |
Source – GOI Department of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare; Data as of July 15, 2022 (https://agricoop.nic.in/en/weather-watch)
Globally, agricultural commodity prices have started to
soften. A healthy monsoon season should help in easing food prices
in the domestic market as well.
Government’s inflation fight
Government has also joined the inflation fight. Over the
last two months, the central government has reduced taxes on petrol and diesel,
doubled the fertilizer subsidy, cut the import taxes on edible oils, put a
limit on the export of wheat and sugar and imposed an export duty on exports on
iron and steel. Various state governments have also reduced the VAT (value
added tax) on petrol and diesel.
The government is particularly sensitive about the food
and fuel inflation that have been elevated for the last two years. The
government may announce more measures to bring down inflation or at least to a
put a cap on it.
Indian CPI
basket has close to 5% weight in petroleum fuel items and around 46% weight in
food items. Thus, reduction in food and fuel prices could sharply bring down
the inflation.
Inflation losing Momentum
In June 2022, CPI inflation grew at 7.01% yoy, posting third consecutive
month of decline in the headline CPI from 7.05% in May 2022 and 7.8% in April
2022. We found some green shoots in the inflation internals.
Sequential momentum across various high weightage items like Cereals,
Meat & Fish, Spices, Prepared meals and clothing & footwear have softened
in June. Prices of
Oil & Fats came down due to drop in global edible oil prices and reduction
in import duties by the Government. The transports and communication index came
down due to earlier reduction in fuel taxes. Another positive sign was the moderation
in the sequential momentum in some of the key services like health care and
recreation.
We expect the headline CPI inflation to move
up again between July – September 2022 due to lower base effect from the last
year and seasonal uptick in the vegetable and fruit prices. However, it should
come down sharply in the second half of the year.
RBI’s monetary policy committee, may deliver another 25-50 basis points
of rate hike in its August meeting, to take the repo rate above its
pre-pandemic level of 5.15%. However, easing of inflation momentum should take
off some pressure and allow the RBI to slow down the pace of rate hikes in the
second half of the year. The RBI may still take the Repo rate to 6.00%
by early next year to take the short-term real interest rates into positive
territory.
Chart -I: Inflation Elevated; But Likely to Slide Lower
Source – MOSPI, Quantum Research
@Actual Data upto June 2022. Data between July 2022
to December 2022 is based on Quantum Fixed Income Team’s Estimates and may or
may not turn out the same.
What does this mean for the Bond Market?
Bond yields have come down sharply
in the last 4-5 weeks in response to falling commodity prices and falling US
treasury yields. The 10-year Indian government bond yield peaked at 7.60% on June 13, 2022.
It fell below 7.30% in the first week of July. Currently, on July 18, 2022, the
10-year Indian government bond is trading at a yield of 7.44%.
Chart – II: Moderating Commodity Prices to Cap Indian Bond Yields
Source – Refinitiv,
Quantum Research; Data as of July 18, 2022
Past Performance may or may not sustain
Last month, we wrote to investors that the prevailing valuations at the
medium to long maturity bonds had built in a significant uncertainty premium (Looking Beyond FED). The recent drop in the bond
yields and the consequent compression of yield spread on medium to long
duration bonds over the repo rate, has lowered the uncertainty premium somewhat.
However, term spreads (yields on long term bonds over shorter maturity
bonds or the repo rate) are still significantly higher than their long term
averages. At 6.88% yield, the 3-year government bond is currently
trading at about 200 basis points above the policy repo rate of 4.90%. The
long-term average of this spread in a tightening interest rate environment is
~80 basis points.
Chart – III: Yield Spreads over Repo Rate are significantly above their long-term averages – pricing for potential rate hikes, demand supply imbalance and other uncertainties
Source – Refinitiv,
Quantum Research; Data as of July 18, 2022
Past Performance may or may not sustain
Chart – IV: Bond Valuations have built-in significant uncertainty premium
Source – Refinitiv,
Quantum Research; Data as of July 18, 2022
Past Performance may or may not sustain
Even in terms of real rates (interest rates/bond yields minus expected
inflation rate), yield on government bonds beyond 1 year maturity are now above
the average 12 months
forward inflation estimate. Our estimate of 12 months average forward inflation
(simple average of expected monthly inflation estimates from July 2022 till
June 2023) is around 6.2%.
Chart –V: Real rates are now in positive territory beyond 12 months term
Source – Refinitiv,
Quantum Research; Data as of July 18, 2022
@ Real rates
are calculated based on forward 12 months CPI inflation as per the Quantum Fixed
Income Team’s Estimates; Future estimates may or may not turn out the
same.
Past Performance may or may not sustain
Outlook
Markets have a tendency to pre-empt
policy moves. Yields on medium to long term bonds had moved up over the last 12
months to price for the rising inflationary risks and potential rate hikes by
the RBI.
At current valuations, much of the
potential rate hikes are already priced in the medium to long duration bonds. Thus,
the bond market may not be too sensitive to RBI’s rate hikes going forward.
As the RBI
delivers on the expected rate hikes, short term interest rates – yield short
term treasury bills etc. should move higher proportionately. However, long term
bond yields may remain in a tight range or move up only marginally.
We found a similar trend in past. In
all the previous rate hiking cycles, maximum jump in yields had happened up
until the first-rate hike. Thereafter, yields moved up only marginally or got
stuck in a narrow range.
Chart – VI: Bond Market has run ahead of the Policy rates; Much of the potential Rate Hikes are already Priced
Source – Refinitiv,
Quantum Research; Data as of July 18, 2022
Past Performance may or may not sustain
There is still a risk of yields moving up due to unfavorable
demand-supply balance. Long term bonds (above 5 years maturity) are more
exposed to this risk as their prices are more sensitive to interest rate
changes. When market interest rates rise, long term bond prices fall more compared
to prices of shorter maturity bonds.
Since we are in a rising interest rate environment, at this stage
our strategy should be to have higher accrual with a lower maturity/duration. In our opinion 2-5 year maturity
bonds offer this critical balance between accrual (interest income) and
duration (price changes).
Portfolio Positioning
In the Quantum Dynamic Bond Fund
(QDBF), we have been avoiding long-term bonds for some time due to our cautious
stance on the markets. The defensive positioning helped the portfolio ride
through the market sell-off over the last 6 months.
Bulk of the QDBF portfolio is
currently positioned in the 1-3 years maturity bonds. We continue to like the
2-5 year segment of the bond market and maintain our cautious stance on the
above 5 year maturity bonds.
However, we would remain open and
nimble to exploit any market mispricing by making a measured tactical
allocation to any part of the bond yield curve as and when the opportunity
arises.
We stand
vigilant to react and change the portfolio positioning in case our view on the
market changes.
What should
Investors do?
Interest rate on short term
treasury bills have jumped about 160 basis points (1.6%) in the last 6 months.
With more rate hikes coming, short term treasury bill rates are expected to
move higher in coming months. This suggests higher potential returns from
investments in liquid and debt funds going forward.
Chart – VII: Liquid Fund Yields Closely Tracks 2-3 Months Treasury Bill Rate
Source – Refinitiv,
Quantum Research; Data as of July 18, 2022
Past Performance may or may not sustain
Since the interest rate on bank saving
accounts are not likely to increase quickly while the returns from liquid fund
are already seeing an increase, investing in liquid funds looks more attractive
for your surplus funds. Investors with a short-term investment horizon and with
little desire to take risks, should invest in liquid funds which own government
securities and do not invest in private sector companies which carry lower
liquidity and higher risk of capital loss in case of default.
Investors with
more than 2-3 years holding period can consider dynamic bond funds which have a
flexibility to change the portfolio positioning as per the evolving market
conditions.
Medium to Long
term interest rates in the bond markets are already at long-term averages as
compared to fixed deposits which remain low. With higher accrual yield
(interest income) and relatively lower price risk (compared to last two years),
dynamic bond funds are appropriately positioned to gain.
However,
investors in debt fund dynamic bond funds or any other medium to long term debt
funds should be ready to tolerate some intermittent volatility associated with
the movement in the market interest rates.
Disclaimer, Statutory Details & Risk
Factors:
The views expressed here in this article / video
are for general information and reading purpose only and do not constitute any
guidelines and recommendations on any course of action to be followed by the
reader. Quantum AMC / Quantum Mutual Fund is not guaranteeing / offering /
communicating any indicative yield on investments made in the scheme(s). The
views are not meant to serve as a professional guide / investment advice /
intended to be an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale of any
financial product or instrument or mutual fund units for the reader. The
article has been prepared on the basis of publicly available information,
internally developed data and other sources believed to be reliable. Whilst no
action has been solicited based upon the information provided herein, due care
has been taken to ensure that the facts are accurate and views given are fair
and reasonable as on date. Readers of this article should rely on
information/data arising out of their own investigations and advised to seek
independent professional advice and arrive at an informed decision before
making any investments.
Risk Factors: Mutual
Fund investments are subject to market risks, read all scheme related documents
carefully.
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