Thailand to cut reliance on long bonds in US$66 billion debt plan

Published Fri, Sep 29, 2023 · 03:36 PM

Thailand will reduce sales of long-tenor debt in favour of shorter notes to soothe investors worried about its plan to lift sovereign borrowing to a three-year high, according to the nation’s debt office.

The government plans to raise 2.43 trillion baht (S$90.8 billion) in debt in the fiscal year starting Oct 1, the most since 2020-21, when it funded Covid stimulus. The near 8 per cent hike in borrowing is to finance a raft of measures announced by the government to lower the cost of living. 

“We think the market can absorb the planned supply as we talk to market participants all the time,” Patricia Mongkhonvanit, director general of the Public Debt Management Office, said in an interview on Thursday (Sep 28). “We need to strike a balance between our funding needs and what the investors want.”

The debt office will need to contend with a fading appetite for Thai notes among foreign portfolio investors, who are net sellers of more than US$2 billion of Thai bonds after a general election in May triggered a months-long political impasse. The yield on benchmark 10-year bonds have soared about 55 basis points to near an 11-month high since Srettha Thavisin was elected as the prime minister of a coalition government last month.

Srettha’s populist government has unveiled measures to spur economic growth that requires higher state spending, prompting the Cabinet to clear a bigger budget deficit next year. The Bank of Thailand has raised its key rate to a decade-high 2.5 per cent, and most economists now expect it to be on an extended pause. 

The debt office plans to address any investor concerns by lowering the ratio of long-tenor bonds of 10 year and more to 48 per cent of total issuance from 54 per cent planned earlier. Thailand is also more reliant on local insurance, pension and mutual funds as foreign investors own only about 5 per cent of government’s outstanding bonds, Patricia said.

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Standard Chartered Bank expects foreign investors to continue to shun Thai bonds given the additional supplies, preference for higher-yielding emerging market notes and the baht weakness. The BOT pause is likely to sustain rates curve steepening pressure, and the wide rate differentials with the US will likely continue to fuel portfolio outflows from Thailand, Stanchart analysts led by Tim Leelahaphan said in a report. 

While 1.7 trillion baht will be used for debt restructuring and refinancing, 730.8 billion baht will be new borrowing mainly to finance the budget deficit, Patricia said. The debt office plans to sell as much as 277 billion baht of bonds in the three months through December and about 180 billion baht of 6-month treasury bills, she said.

The cabinet approval for public debt has pencilled in only 194.4 billion baht as new borrowing for 2024 fiscal year, a fraction of the 1.13 trillion baht this year as it takes into account only the ongoing investment projects. The plan will be revised to include budget deficit and new projects, Patricia said. BLOOMBERG

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