A short visit to the bond street
The yields curve in India has been moving higher for past few months, despite the efforts made by the Reserve bank of India to anchor the benchmark yields at lower levels. In past one year, the RBI has used most of the arrows in its quiver to manage the bond yields, apparently with the three targets in view – (a) to help the government fund its fiscal expansion at reasonable rate; (b) to keep the financial markets calm in the times of adversity; and (c) to keep the rate environment supportive of growth. However, last week the RBI appears to have changed the trajectory of its policy by accepting higher coupon (6.10%) for the new benchmark security (6.10GS2031). This move is widely expected to result in India’s yield curve inching little higher, and perhaps flattening a bit. The debt market traders have largely seen the latest move of RBI as the rise in its tolerance for higher yields. Though the governor has maintained that RBI is committed to keep the borrowing cost for the go...