Analysts estimate debt supply of around 8.1 trillion rupees ($90.3 billion) between January-March, including around 3.1 trillion rupees from New Delhi and about 5 trillion rupees from states.
Why it’s important?
Elevated bond supply tends to push yields higher as investors demand better returns to absorb the issuance, forcing governments to pay up. This can lead to budget squeezes and prompt spending restraint to keep the fiscal math in line.
Higher government bond yields feed into loan and corporate borrowing rates, diluting some of the effect of rate cuts delivered by the Reserve Bank of India.
Key quotes
“Bond market sentiment remains poor, despite RBI’s recent support. The main reason comes from a complete lack of demand presently as insurance, pension funds, banks, and foreign investors have limited demand while supply of bonds from centre and states remains heavy,” said Nathan Sribalasundaram, Asia Rates Strategist, Nomura.
“We could see the 10-year benchmark bond yield testing 6.75% levels, as investor appetite remains weak and a large issuance pipeline hangs over the market,” said VRC Reddy, treasury head at Karur Vysya Bank.
By the numbers
With state borrowing at nearly 5 trillion rupees, and centre’s borrowing above 3 trillion rupees, the January-March period could end up seeing record supply for any quarter, 25% higher than the current quarter.
Market Reaction
India’s 10-year benchmark bond yield has jumped over 20 basis points to 6.67% from lows hit immediately after RBI’s repo rate cut on December 5. That’s despite 1 trillion rupees of debt purchases and 450 billion rupees of liquidity injection via FX swaps.
