India’s Short-Term Borrowing Costs Dip To Lowest Since 2022
The yield on the 364-day treasury bill dipped to 6.7240% in an auction on Wednesday, the least since September 2022.
(Bloomberg) -- Short-term borrowing costs in India declined to the lowest in nearly two years, reflecting a buildup of liquidity in the banking system just as calls for central bank policy pivot mount.
The yield on the 364-day treasury bill dipped to 6.7240% in an auction on Wednesday, the least since September 2022. The yield on other very short-dated papers also dipped.
Lower government borrowing via treasury bills has helped push borrowing costs lower, with government spending after elections fueling a liquidity surplus. An additional driver are the RBI’s currency interventions in the face of overseas capital inflows linked to India’s inclusion in JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s emerging market bond index.
“Cyclically during this time we don’t see much of a cash withdrawal,” which would be a big drain on liquidity, said Pankaj Pathak, a senior fixed income fund manager at Quantum Asset Management Co. Short-term rates are likely to stay low for a few more months as the system remains in excess ahead of the festive season, he added.
The RBI began a series of aggressive interest rate increases in 2022. But slowing consumer demand and concerns about the health of the global economy are now fueling calls for cuts.
Inter-system liquidity stood at 1.5 trillion rupees ($17.9 billion) on Aug. 13, according to a Bloomberg Economics gauge. Nomura Holdings, Inc. strategist Nathan Sribalasundaram expects it to stay in surplus until late September.
--With assistance from Ronojoy Mazumdar.
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
©2024 Bloomberg L.P.