We are a prominent Chartered Accountant’s firm in Delhi-NCR with our pan-India clientele presence and have alliance with global associates. We offer proficient & professional auditors, taxation & corporate services to our various stakeholders itself in Delhi and other mega cities & major parts of India.
Tuesday, March 23, 2021
No dearth of liquidity, but RBI sees little demand for govt bonds
A vigilante and a gambler walk into a bond market. No, that’s not the start of a new joke, just the
comical look of India’s fixed-income saloon nowadays. There’s no dearth of liquidity, but the
bartender — the central bank — is having a tough time getting orders for the good stuff even by
cajoling and threatening customers. At the same time, potent but risky hooch is selling briskly,
although the lawman — the Federal Reserve — is almost at the door. Indian government bonds are
the “good stuff” and must sell. It’s the only way tax-strapped authorities can raise money and spend it
to shake the economy out of its Covid-19 stupor. Yet a yield of just about 6% on 10-year rupee paper
from a barely investment grade sovereign has none of the kick of the near-21% rate of return offered
by a D-rated private borrower on a five-year note. That’s how much Kesoram Industries Ltd., a
Kolkata-based cement manufacturer that defaulted last year, recently gave on its 16 billion rupees
($221 million) in junk bonds, which got sold to the likes of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Cerberus
Capital Management. But rather than the gamblers, it’s the vigilantes — pesky investors never happy
with lax fiscal and monetary policies — who seem to be bothering the Reserve Bank of India. The
RBI, which has the job of raising money for the government, invited fixed-income investors to join it in
a tango and “forestall a tandav” — the solo dance of destruction of the Hindu god Shiva. (I didn’t
make this up. See the bank’s March 19 monthly bulletin for a veiled threat involving acrobatic moves
and colorful imagery around bond vigilantes, who “prowl markets, guns holstered and saddled up.”)
However, right now the Fed is the only deity whose wrath — and gyrations — emerging markets truly
fear. It’s the same story from Istanbul to Mumbai, with one key difference: Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has sacked three central bank chiefs in two years, while Prime Minister Narendra
Modi, already on to his third RBI governor, is more concerned right now with unseating the state chief
minister in upcoming elections for West Bengal, where his party has never been in power. That isn’t
enough to impress bond buyers. Foreigners have pulled out billions of dollars from India’s bond
markets over the past 12 months. Even domestic banks have been shunning debt auctions ever since
the government’s Feb. 1 budget delivered the unpleasant news of a planned 6.8% deficit for the
upcoming fiscal year, on top of a 9.5% shortfall in the year that will end March 31. While anxiety in the
U.S. market stems from the prospect of above-normal growth and inflation, India’s economy might
permanently lose 11% of its potential output, according to Crisil, the local affiliate of S&P Global Inc.
At the eve of the nationwide lockdown last March, the growth rate had already halved — to 4% from
8.3% in March 2017. Then came the virus, and an estimated 8% tumble. Vaccinations are picking up
pace, but if the ongoing second wave of infections overwhelms the population, even sporadic,
localized lockdowns will make the recovery sluggish. Add the risk of a taper tantrum, a real possibility
if the Fed is forced to abruptly rethink just how fast it can afford to let the U.S. economy run before
reining it in by raising interest rates. That could accelerate capital flight out of emerging markets.
Currencies could swoon, like the Turkish lira this week. Even though the rupee is the best emergingmarket currency so far this year, 6% isn’t adequate risk compensation for 10-year notes. However, it’s
also true that unlike in 2013, there’s no unsustainable current account deficit to worry about. So
there’s a chance that the fear of the Fed won’t creep into Indian markets as viciously as it did back
then. In that case, it would be a better gamble to buy super-pricey Indian equities or distressed bonds
offering 21%. Vanilla government bonds are paying so little in Asia that insurers are being forced to
take to take credit risks to pay policyholders. “Take Vietnam, for instance; who would ever have
thought that we would have a 2% interest rate for 10-year government bonds in a country that's BB
rated?” Stephan van Vliet, the chief investment officer of Prudential Corporation Asia Ltd., said at an
AsianInvestor conference recently. “But the only way to deal with that is to find attractive credit
spreads.” Thus, neither the vigilantes dumping bonds nor the gamblers raising their bets are being
wholly irrational, even though one of them may be laughing all the way to the bank next year, while
the other becomes the butt of bar jokes.
Business Standard, 24th March 2021
Presently, we are in alliance with large pool of worthy clients who help us to enter into new avenues. We are grateful to our professionals who have sound knowledge and experience in the financial and business management industry. They pay close attention to each client to understand their requirements and deliver the best relevant service accordingly.
Over the years, we have established a remarkable position in the industry to deal with small to large organizations or individual client and other agencies. Our talent, quick response, dedication and satisfactory services can be illustrated from the respect we have earned for ourselves among our clients.Our Organization renders Value Added Services to its clients and ensures that each of the clients is attended up to their entire satisfaction.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Sebi cracks down on pseudo buy and sell orders designed to deceive
The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has trained its guns on ‘spoofing’ and ‘quote stuffing’—stock market jargon for pseudo bu...
Taxation Of Expatriates
-
In order to justify our remarkable position in the market, we are providing a large array of services which include FCRA Registr...
-
We are providing a wide array of services such as Trademark Consultancy Services to small to large organization and other agencies...
No comments:
Post a Comment