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Indian bond market is coming of age

The government bond market saw a flurry of activity towards the end of September. Most important of these was the JP Morgan Chase & Co. announcement that Indian government bonds were to be included in its benchmark emerging market index

October 05, 2023 / 17:11 IST
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The inclusion of Indian bonds in global bond indices as an important milestone towards the internationalisation of the rupee.

The Indian bond markets were in for a triple treat in the last few days. Indian government bonds were included in the JP Morgan Emerging Market Global Bond Index. This was followed by the Indian government announcing that it would issue 50-year sovereign bonds and 30-year sovereign green bonds, for the first time. All these three developments add to the growing importance of the bond markets in the Indian financial system. Let us review the three developments and discuss their implications.

Global Recognition

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The first is the inclusion of Indian government bonds in the JP Morgan Global Bond Index-Emerging Markets (GBI-EM). JP Morgan formed the GBI-EM index in the 1990s after the issuance of so named Brady Bonds. These bonds were named after the then treasury secretary Nicholas Brady who helped Latin American economies restructure their outstanding debt via new sovereign bonds denominated in US dollars. Just as the Nifty and Sensex act as benchmarks for equity markets, the GBI-EM bond market index acts as a benchmark for emerging market bond markets. Global investors seeking to invest in bonds of emerging markets can analyse the returns and risks based on this benchmark. The fund management industry started launching active and passive funds of emerging market debt based on this benchmark.

Over time, JP Morgan created three indices within the GBI-EM category – EMBI Global, EMBIG Diversified and EMBI+. India has been included in the EMBI Global fund. Currently, total funds worth $236 billion are benchmarked on the three GBI-EM indices, of which $213 billion are benchmarked on the Global Fund index, which is nearly 90 percent of the GBI-EM family. Apart from JP Morgan, FTSE Russell and Bloomberg-Barclays have also developed their own bond indices.