Monthly Fixed Income Commentary
In March, Indian bond yields eased by
5-20 basis points across the maturity curve. The benchmark 10-year government
bond (Gsec) yield fell by 12 basis points to end the month at 7.31%.
The rally in the Indian bond market was
primarily in response to a sharp drop in the US treasury yields. The 10-year US
treasury yield fell by 42 basis points in March from 3.91% to 3.49% as
financial stability concerns resurfaced in the US and Europe.
The failure of the Silicon Valley
Bank and the Signature Bank in the US and the collapse of Credit Suisse in Europe
triggered a global risk-off sentiment. It significantly lowered the rate hike
probabilities in the advanced economies and fuelled a sudden bond rally. Indian
bond yields followed global yields on the way down.
The short-term money market yields moved
up sharply at the start of the month due to tax outflows and a lack of demand
ahead of the financial year closing.
However, rates came down sharply towards the month end as the year-end
government spending eased liquidity in the banking system.
During the month, the yield on 3 months commercial papers (CPs) of AAA-rated PSUs fell from ~7.5% to 7.15%.
Monetary
Policy
In the first bi-monthly monetary policy of FY24, the Monetary Policy Committee
(MPC) of the RBI left the policy repo rate unchanged at 6.5%. Consequently, the
SDF (Standing Deposit Facility) rate remained unchanged at 6.25%, and MSF
(Marginal Standing Facility) rate at 6.75%
The policy stance is retained as
‘withdrawal of accommodation’ to ensure that inflation progressively aligns
with the target while supporting growth.
The RBI also lowered its CPI
inflation estimate for FY24 from 5.3% to 5.2%; while keeping its GDP growth
forecast the same at 6.5%.
The hawkish tone in the February
policy statement and the surprise jump in Inflation in the last month had
fuelled an expectation of a rate hike in this policy.
Thus, a ‘no rate hike’ was a positive
surprise.
The governor made special efforts to
sound hawkish by singling out this rate pause as a one-time deviation from its
broader monetary policy path. Despite the use of Phrases like ‘for this
meeting only’ and ‘a pause not pivot’, the bond market seems to have
read it differently.
Bond yields fell by around 10 basis
points post-policy announcement with the 10-year government bond yield falling
below 7.2% intraday.
The governor made repeated references to the potential impact of the effective 290 basis points of rate increases in the last 1 year. This, along with the downward revision in inflation, indicates that the RBI has probably reached its destination in terms of the level of the Repo Rate and will hike rate only if the inflation path moves up significantly. The pause also seems to be driven by global financial stability issues.
Rate Outlook
Going ahead, the bond market should price
for an extended rate pause with a terminal repo rate at 6.5%. This should open up
space for Government bond yields to go down. We would expect the 10-year
government bonds to trade between 7.00%-7.40%.
At a current yield of 7.2%,
government bonds are now offering a positive real yield of about 200 basis
points based on 4 quarter-ahead inflation estimate of 5.2%.
Also, with the rate hiking cycle
nearing its end and inflation trending down, the probability of capital gains
in long-term bonds has increased. Investors with over 2-3 years of investment
horizon should allocate to dynamic bond funds which tend to benefit in this
kind of interest rate environment.
Dynamic bond funds have the flexibility
to change the portfolio positioning as per the evolving market conditions. This
makes dynamic bond funds better suited for long-term investors in this volatile
macro environment.
Investors with shorter investment horizons
and low-risk appetite should stick with liquid funds. Tightening liquidity
conditions will continue to put upward pressure on short-term rates and is in
turn positive for short-term
debt fund categories like the liquid fund. We would expect further improvement
in the return potential of these categories as interest accrual on short-term
debt instruments has risen meaningfully.
Since the interest rate on bank
saving accounts are not likely to increase quickly while the returns from the 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.
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