The 10-year bond yield may rise to 6.50 per cent soon and touch even 7 per cent in a year, indicating a turn in the rate cycle, which will push up borrowing costs for the government, firms, and retail loan takers. However, the rise will be slow, experts say, and players in the system will have ample time to readjust to it.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) had tried to keep the yield under 6 per cent for the better part of the calendar 2020, but has let it rise gradually since February this year, preferring an “orderly evolution of yield curve”.
A beneficiary in the system would be savers. While inflation averaged 6.6 per cent in calendar 2020 and 6.2 per cent in 2020-21, the SBI one-year deposit yielded 5 per cent or thereabouts. A negative real interest rate the RBI will try to correct, bond dealers say.
Lower-rated corporate firms, which are most of the rating universe in India, will be the worst hit because they did not have proper access to finance even when liquidity was good. But the better-rated firms will continue to do good because each bank will try to be one jump ahead of others to lend to them, and the markets too will be eager to lap up their bonds.
“Rate normalisation is a matter of time, and we can expect initiation in the December 6-8 policy review itself. The RBI will still be supportive and lead the market to a gradual up-move in interest rates,” Sen said.
The bond market is indicating such rate movements much in advance.
“The 10-year yield is heading towards 6.50 per cent, but there is resistance around 6.40 per cent,” said Rahul Singh, fund manager, fixed income, LIC Mutual Fund.
Singh expects the 10-year yield to touch 7 per cent in about a year, but the journey would be “bumpy”. “The RBI still believes growth indicators have not achieved full capacity but inflation still could be managed,” Singh said.
The core implication of the bond yield movement is that rates are tightening indirectly, without the central bank announcing it.
“The rise in yields is a reflection of changes in the interest rate environment, which includes commodity prices and the growth-inflation outlook. But the RBI is comfortable with orderly movements in yields, which is a kind of silent normalisation -- allowing market-based rates to inch up gradually, without touching policy rates,” said Soumyajit Niyogi, associate director, India Ratings and Research.
The halting of the assured bond purchase programme by the RBI should be taken as the first step towards policy normalisation, RBI Deputy Governor Michael Patra, who is also in charge of monetary policy in the central bank, and is a member of the six-member monetary policy committee (MPC), had said in the October policy.