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The Economic Times
The Economic Times

India bond gains capped by smaller than expected RBI dividend

An advance in Indian government bonds was ​restrained on Friday by traders ​paring bullish positions after a lower-than-expected surplus transfer from the Reserve ​Bank of India to the government brought fiscal concerns to the fore.

The benchmark 6.48% 2035 bond yield settled at 7.0917%, bouncing off the day's low of 7.0636%, but still 2.2 basis points below ‌Thursday's close. The ⁠yield ⁠rose 3 bps on the week after sharp swings inrecent sessions. Bond prices move inversely to yields.

The Reserve ​Bank of India approved the transfer of 2.87 trillion rupees ($29.99 billion) as surplus to the federal government, ​it said in a statement on Friday. The surplus transfer is bigger than last year's record 2.69 trillion rupees, but below market expectations.

Iran's blockade of the Strait ​of Hormuz has thrown global energy supply into disarray, especially ⁠for countries ‌such as India, which imports 90% of its oil requirements. ​Nearly one third of ​that usually comes through the strait, and disruptions to crude, ⁠natural gas as well as other key commodity supplies are set ​to weigh on India's economy.

"There is risk of a ​large fiscal slippage, so the government is in need of additional revenue sources," said A Prasanna, chief economist at ICICI Securities Primary Dealership.

The median forecast from a Reuters poll of economists pegged India's fiscal deficit at 4.7% of gross domestic product this fiscal year, with some saying it could go as high as 5%, compared to ‌last year's 4.4% and the government's 4.3% target.

MUFG has called for RBI policy rate hikes of 25 bps each in June and ​August, following ​a similar projection by ⁠Standard Chartered.

The RBI, however, does not see interest rate hikes as the best way to defend the embattled rupee, reinforcing that inflation - not the currency - will guide policy on ​borrowing costs, Reuters reported, citing sources.

RATES

India's overnight index swap rates eased as traders received fixed rates after heavy paying in the previous session on rate-hike concerns.

The one-year swap ended 5.5 bps lower at 6.30%, while the two-year rate fell 3.5 bps to 6.52%. The five-year rate fell 2.75 bps to 6.8150%.

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