Nomura calls for intervention to snap India bonds' vicious cycle

[MUMBAI] Indian bonds are caught in a vicious cycle and policy makers need to intervene to break that to prevent more losses, according to Nomura Holdings Inc.

State-run banks - the biggest holders of local sovereign debt - are largely staying away, owing to losses worth billions of rupees suffered during a rout that has seen the 10-year yield rise in nine of the last 10 months. That's at a time when supply of government bonds is rising and foreign funds are dumping rupee notes at a record pace.

"It's in a way a self-sustaining sort of a vicious cycle that as banks refrain from this market, bond yields go higher and as yields go higher, portfolio valuations gets significantly impacted, which further reduces their appetite," Neeraj Gambhir, Mumbai-based managing director and head of fixed income at Nomura's Indian unit, said in a phone interview.

"This cycle needs to be broken through some policy intervention."

Mr Gambhir's call comes after a slew of measures failed to halt the rout. The central bank and the government have already eased some investment rules for foreigners, pared debt sales and allowed banks to spread out trading losses. Yet, the yield on India's benchmark 10-year bonds has climbed 60 basis points since the first such policy change was announced in late March.

The 10-year yield rose above 8 per cent last week as the Reserve Bank of India raised benchmark interest rates for the first time since 2014 and set the stage for a gradual tightening cycle. A combination a rising oil prices, tighter domestic liquidity and worsening public finances has cast a pall over the debt market in the past year.

"Whether that policy intervention is by way of the RBI buying bonds through open-market operations or it's the government taking some steps to encourage demand from outside or from the domestic market, that needs to be seen," said Mr Gambhir.

"But unless and until we find some other source of demand for government bonds, the stress in the government bond market will probably continue for the foreseeable future."

Investor confidence has also been dented by weakness in the rupee, which is among Asia's worst-performing currencies in 2018.

Whether the 10-year yield "settles at 8 per cent or 8.25 per cent is just a matter of detail, but I don't see any respite at this point in time," said Mr Gambhir.

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