India’s Long Bonds Have Become A Crowded Trade, Edelweiss Warns

The addition of Indian bonds into JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s index last month has turned the market into a focal point for global investors.

Construction workers in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

An Indian bond fund manager says a rally in the nation’s 30-year bonds has gone too far, as traders hyped up expectations for policy rate cuts and increased purchases by foreign funds.

The trade has become crowded as investors eager to ride a paradigm shift in the nation’s rates bet the 30-year debt is the best vehicle to do so, according to Dhawal Dalal, who oversees 820 billion rupees ($10 billion) of assets as the head of fixed income at Edelweiss Asset Management Ltd.

“We believe there won’t be a secular decline in India’s bond yields in the medium term,” Dalal, a 27-year market veteran said in an interview in Mumbai. “We are yet to become a developed country where inflation remains between 2% and 3%.”

The addition of Indian bonds into JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s index last month has turned the market into a focal point for global investors, accentuating the different playbooks employed by local funds to gain an advantage. While rivals such as Bandhan Asset Management have gone massively overweight — in some cases as much as 90% of total assets — on long bonds, Dalal is urging caution given how thinner liquidity leads to volatility. 

The premium that the 30-year benchmark sovereign debt has over the 10-year bond has narrowed to about five basis points recently from 100 basis points in 2020. That’s the narrowest since March 2023.

While Dalal’s firm still has about 25% of its assets in 30-year bonds, he says there’s better value in the more liquid 10 to 15 years debt. The money manager has allocated some 40% of assets in 10-year bonds, he said.

The Reserve Bank of India will probably engage in only a “shallow rate-cutting cycle wherein they’ll probably cut one or two times,” this fiscal year, Dalal said. Should that happen, the 10-year bonds may see yields decline by 25 basis points, he said.

“We don’t know whether there’ll be a parallel shift downward or there’ll be a widening of the spread between the 10 and 30,” Dalal said. “That has to be seen.”

The Reserve Bank of India has kept the policy rate unchanged at 6.5% for more than a year now to control inflation. While the price index has eased in recent months, it’s still at 4.75%, above the central bank’s 4% target.

Even while foreign investors have raised holdings of Indian sovereign bonds since JPMorgan’s announcement in September to include Indian bonds into its emerging-market index, their long-term participation remains to be seen, Dalal said.

Foreign bond investors may follow the path of equities, where they book profits and reinvest when they see an opportunity, Dalal added. “By the same logic, I would believe that portion of the money that they are investing in debt will also be probably moving in and out depending on relative valuations and other opportunities.”

Edelweiss Government Securities Fund, with 1.48 billion rupees of assets, was among the top performers, with a return of 5.64% in the past six months, according to ValueResearch’s ranking of 31 funds. 

“We have to be a little cognizant of all these factors before blindly building a 30-year Indian government bond portfolio,” Dalal said. 

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