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Indian bonds suffer first weekly outflow since index inclusion

Overseas investors sold Rs 1,680 crore ($200 million) of so-called Fully Accessible Route bonds last week, according to Clearing Corporation of India data.

October 14, 2024 / 12:18 IST
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The outflows came amid an uncertain outlook for the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate cuts as well as elevated crude prices on geopolitical tensions.

Indian sovereign bonds that are eligible for global debt inclusion saw their first weekly outflow since getting added to JPMorgan Chase & Co’s emerging-market bond index.

Overseas investors sold Rs 1,680 crore ($200 million) of so-called Fully Accessible Route bonds last week, according to Clearing Corporation of India data. That’s the first such outflow since the addition into JPMorgan’s index in June, and the biggest since the week to May 10, data showed.

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The outflows came amid an uncertain outlook for the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate cuts as well as elevated crude prices on geopolitical tensions. The size of the weekly selling remains modest as compared to the average weekly inflow of $570 million since the index inclusion, according to Morgan Stanley.

“There was an unwinding of total return swap trades resulting in debt outflows due to change in Fed rate expectations and a pullback in US yields,” said Naveen Singh, head of trading at ICICI Securities Primary Dealership Ltd.