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Bond yield falls 14 basis points, most in a year, as RBI scraps open market sale plan

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Mumbai:  Indian 10-year bond yield dropped most in a year on Monday after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) scrapped plans to sell bonds worth Rs10,000 crore via open market operations (OMOs). At 11.14am, the 10-year bond yield was trading at 6.905%, down 14.40 basis points, its biggest slide since November 2016, from its previous close of 7.049%. Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions. “We believe the reversal in RBI’s stance is positive for bond yields and one should see bond yields now heading lower from the current elevated levels. Even as this takes out the near-term worry on yields, pick-up in credit growth will put some upward pressure on bond yields in the medium-term,”  Mint  reported on Friday, quoting Bank of Baroda note. The move came after Moody’s Investor Services raised nation’s rating to Baa2, the first upgrade in 14 years, from the lowest investment grade of Baa3 and changed the outlook from stable to positive. “In view of the recent market developments and

India’s 10-year bond yield at over 13-month high as inflation disappoints

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India’s benchmark 10-year bond yield rose to its highest in over 13 months as higher-than-expected October inflation dashed rate cut expectations. The 10-year bond yield went up as high as 7.01 percent, the highest since September 29, 2016, after October inflation rose to 3.58 percent as food and fuel prices accelerated. The paper had closed at 6.97 percent on Monday. Traders expect yields to rise further as state-run banks, the usual buyers in the secondary market, sit on heavy losses. “We keep saying that state-run banks will come and buy, but are they mad, can’t they see the realities that those days of bond rally are over now?” said a trader. “They can’t keep adding to speculative risks because even for that they need capital to provide for the mark-to-market losses.” The 10-year paper has risen by 50 basis points since the start of July as concerns over global rate tightening and upside risks to inflation back home surfaced.

10-year bond yield hits over 7% after inflation quickens

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Mumbai:  The 10-year bond yield hit over 7% on Tuesday, the first time after 14 months, as retail- and wholesale-based inflation quickened more than estimated, reducing expectation of a rate cut any time soon by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). At 12.05pm, the 10-year bond yield was at 7.058%, a level last seen on 8 September 2016, compared to its previous close of 6.972%. Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions. Wholesale Price Index-based inflation rose to 3.59% against  Bloomberg ’s estimates of 3.01%. Consumer inflation rose 3.58% in October from a year ago, up from 3.28% in September.  Bloomberg  analysts’ estimated Consumer Price Index-based inflation at 3.43%. Broking firm Nomura Research expected CPI inflation to rise above 4% in November and to stay above the RBI’s target of 4% through 2018. “The likelihood of inflation testing the 4% target by late 2017 and staying above it for rest of FY18 reinforces our expectations that the Reserve Bank of India will remain on

Manappuram Fiance raises Rs 200 crore through bonds

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Manappuram Finance has raised Rs 200 crore by issuing secured bonds on a private placement basis. The Financial Resources and Management Committee of the board of directors of the company in a meeting held today approved the allotment of 2,000 secured redeemable non-convertible debentures, the company said in a regulatory filing. With a face value of Rs 10 lakh each, the aggregate value of the bonds issued through a private placement is Rs 200 crore. The Kerala based non-banking finance company is one of the leading gold loan financing companies that started its operations way back in 1949. It has over the years diversified into other financial products such as housing loans, vehicle finance, microfinance as well as a loan against property. The stock of Manappuram Finance on Monday closed 0.41 per cent up at Rs 98 a unit on the BSE.

Bond gains from softer India inflation data may be short-lived

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Mumbai:  Investors shouldn’t read too much into Friday’s advance in Indian bonds, which follows a slower-than-estimated rise in inflation last month. That’s because the softer headline number masks an increase in demand-side pressures, which is what the central bank looks to manage through interest rates. The so-called core inflation climbed to 4.6% in September from 4.5% in August, according to estimates from Deutsche Bank AG. Consumer prices rose 3.28% in September from a year earlier, slower than the 3.53% median estimate in a  Bloomberg  survey. The benchmark 10-year bond yield fell 3 basis points to 6.73% in Mumbai on Friday. It reached the highest since mid-May on Monday after the Reserve Bank of India last week held rates steady, raised inflation forecasts and reiterated a neutral policy stance. September’s CPI data is unlikely to sway the inflation-targeting RBI into cutting rates anytime soon, according to Deutsche Bank and Morgan Stanley. Also, other negatives for the bond m

General Insurance IPO subscribed 80% on Day 1

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The initial public offer (IPO) of state-owned General Insurance Corporation of India was subscribed 80 percent on the first day of the bidding today. GIC Re’s Rs 11,370-crore IPO received bids for 9,93,04,384 shares against the total issue size of 12,47,00,000 shares. The portion meant for QIB was subscribed 1.55 times, but non-institutional investor category received just 1 percent subscription and retail segment received 6 per cent bids, according to the NSE data. The reinsurance company has fixed the price band at Rs 855-912 for its IPO which closes on October 13. If fully subscribed at the upper end of the price band, this will be the largest public float by a domestic company after the October 2010 offer by Coal India which had raised Rs 15,000 crore. The issue comprises fresh issue of 1,72,00,000 shares by the Corporation and an offer for sale of 10,75,00,000 shares by the promoter. The company proposes to utilise the proceeds towards augmenting the capital base to support growt

India’s bonds slump after RBI cuts SLR by 50 bps

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India’s bonds slumped on Wednesday, sending yield sharply higher, after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cut the statutory liquidity ratio, or the amount of bonds banks must set aside with the central bank, by 50 bps to 19.50 percent from mid-October. The decision, announced at the same time the RBI kept the repo rate unchanged at 6.00 percent, is meant to spur banks into lending more, but it would mean increased supply at a time of ample liquidity. The RBI said it would reduce banks’ statutory liquidity ratio by 50 bps to 19.5 percent from the fortnight starting Oct. 14. The benchmark 10-year bond yield rose 8 basis points to 6.70 percent from levels before the SLR announcement. Meanwhile the rupee strengthened to 65.26 per dollar from around 65.34 before the decision, while the broader NSE Nifty gained 0.7 percent.