While the equity markets and rupee have held their
ground, the "cautious mood" is most palpable in the debt markets, the
multinational banking and financial services corporation said in a daily
market report.
India’s domestic markets have traded on a strong note in
2017, but of late there is a sense of underlying unease, Singapore’s DBS
Bank said today.
While the equity markets and rupee have held
their ground, the "cautious mood" is most palpable in the debt markets,
the multinational banking and financial services corporation said in a
daily market report.
DBS noted that 10-year bond yields climbed
for a fifth consecutive month into December (6.5 per cent in June 2017
to over 7.2 per cent in December -- one-and-a-half-year highs), with
momentum strengthening due to a confluence of unfavourable factors on
both the demand and supply front.
In the immediate term, some consolidation at highs is likely as much of the negativity has been priced i
Eyes
are on upcoming event risks -- two state election results due on 18
December (stakes are higher in Gujarat), the winter parliament session,
November trade numbers, and fiscal developments, which will dictate
near-term action, believes DBS.
"Beyond that, factoring in the
recent sell-off and the likelihood of a weaker macro profile, we see
reason to be cautious, nudging up our yield forecasts for the year
ahead," the report stated.
Beyond this year, five states go the
polls in 2018, and five more until the General Elections in the first
half of 2019. The crucial states are Rajasthan, Karnataka, and Madhya
Pradesh, with a bigger weight in the Upper House of Parliament, it
added.
The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party’s performance in the
upcoming state polls will serve as a litmus test of its popularity
considering recent policy changes and reforms, particularly the Goods
and Services Tax (GST), the bank said.
Overall, risks are building on the horizon, muddied by the rise in commodity prices.
Despite
this modest deterioration, it is amply clear that the metrics are still
in a far better shape than in 2013. The bond issuance calendar will be
busy for the December 2017 quarter, but is expected to ease off into
January-March 2018.
In the face of surging yields, the authorities
deferred some issuance, conducted debt repurchases, and raised limits
for foreign portfolio debt interests (FPI), which has provided temporary
relief from the supply end.
"We have nudged up our yield
forecasts for India government bonds and now expect 2-year and 10-year
yields to touch 6.6 per cent and 7.5 per cent by end-2018," said DBS.
"Ten-year
yields have risen by more than 50 bps since end-September as the market
gravitates to our view that fundamentals (rising price pressures and a
widening current account deficit) have become a lot less conducive for
bonds.
"Notably, headline inflation rose 4.9 per cent year-on- year
(against consensus estimates of a 4.3 per cent rise) in November,
further supporting our case that a modest rate hike cycle may be poised
to begin in 2019," it said.
18 Dec 2017, 10:54 AM