Fiscal deficit, bond switch worries may hit yields

Fiscal deficit, bond switch worries may hit yields


Concern on the government's fiscal deficit exceeding the target and the government's Rs 50,000-crore bond debt-switch programme may hit the bond market. While the latter is being viewed as a greater concern, the former may gain prominence in the next few weeks.

The government had pegged the fiscal deficit for this financial year at 4.8 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP). On many occasions, it has assured it will be able to meet the target. But recently, concern emerged on this front due to challenges on the revenue and expenditure fronts.

"Concern on fiscal deficit is strong for a couple of factors. Revenue growth was targeted at 20 per cent in the Budget. Now, it looks like a very ambitious target. So far, the numbers do not support 20 per cent growth. There may be slippages on the revenue target.

The concerns are on disinvestments and spectrum sales. If you look at the last spectrum sale, the financial numbers are not very encouraging. On the expenditure side, the main concern will be on the subsidy front — on how the government will manage subsidies. We are still not clear on the implications of the food security Bill on subsidy numbers. The challenges are more on the revenue front,&" said S P Prabhu, vice-president (fixed income), IDBI Federal Life Insurance.

Though it has been assured the debt-switch programme will be carried out in a non-disruptive manner, there is concern it will hurt the sentiment in the bond market. Through this programme, the government will buy short-dated debt maturing in 2014-15, 2015-16 and 2016-17 and sell longer-dated bonds to markets.

On Friday, the yield on the 10-year benchmark 8.83 per cent bond ended at 8.63 per cent, against its previous close of 8.62 per cent. Earlier this month, yields started softening on hopes of a fall in inflation. Though inflation in December was lower than in the previous month, the bullish sentiment may be short-lived.

"The fiscal deficit target may be breached because the economy has slowed considerably. Whatever they have done for petrol and diesel prices is not enough. They may do some adjustments because they are aggressively curtailing planned expenditures, but there is a limit for that. The fiscal deficit could be 5.1-5.2 per cent of GDP,&" said Rupa Rege Nitsure, chief economist, Bank of Baroda.

Source » Economics Times
Thanking you

Regards,

Rajesh Kumar Kathpalia ¤ SMC Global
17,Netaji Subhash Marg,Daryaganj,
New Delhi-110002 Mobile No 9891645052
Email Id: rajesh.ipo@smcindiaonline.com


--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Product Updates for AMC" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to Productupdatesforamc+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Comments




I would like to request you to join our following services.
It is the smartest way to stay on top of latest Mutual fund, Bonds & IPO News .

 Product Updates on whatsapp


 Product Updates on Email 

                                                   
 Product Updates on Telegram



You will get daily news updates for FREE. 
I also request you to spread the world by referring us to the smartest people you know.  

To share it with your friends, 
just Copy below message it & paste in your group

Subscribe to Our WhatsApp, Email & Telegram Update Service ! https://bit.ly/3ryhxBM
     

Popular Posts

Reliance Mutual Fund lowest bidder for managing NPS

Key Trigger Points for Market

FM's solution to fiscal deficit: Earn now, spend next year