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February 16, 2011

Has Interest Rate peaked out?

We are in a very peculiar situation; equity market is down but gold prices are picking up. Inflation has not been budging down; the liquidity deficit along with the RBI’s ‘calibrated’ turned ‘aggressive’ monetary policies has been driving short term rates. While the Industrial production as measured by IIP nosedived drastically to 1.6 per cent for Dec 2010 from 18 per cent in Dec 2009 mainly due of high base effect and slowdown in industrial activity, the headline inflation cooled marginally to 8.23 per cent, higher than the street expectation of 8.1 per cent. This extreme slowdown in industrial growth may not prevent the central bank RBI to hike the policy rates for another time as the inflation remains stubbornly high.

What other indicators say?
·         10-year G-Sec Bond movement
The G-Sec 10-year yield, an indicator of long-term interest rate scenario in India has been trading below its July 2008 peak when the world markets had been reeling under the immense economic upheavals.  In July 2008, the yield on 10-year note went as high as 9.4 per cent. Due to various accommodative measures announced by RBI, the 10-year note touched to its low of 5.2-5.3 per cent. However, with improved market scenario and increased government borrowing which led to wide gap in fiscal deficit, the bond yield inched upwards to the level 8.23 per cent, but still below the July 2008 level.


·         Short Term rates at its 26-month peak
The interest rates on 3 Months and 12 Months Certificate of Deposits (CDs) – these are short term deposits raised by banks from fellow participants; unlike normal term deposits, these are traded in secondary market – have reached to its 26-month peak on tight liquidity in the system. The liquidity deficit since 3G and WIMAX auctions which led to outflows of over Rs. 1 lakh crore coupled with the government’s high cash balances with RBI and sluggish deposit-credit ratio have led banks tap this market. Short-term rates have continued their upward movement after the RBI started hiking policy rates. The 3M and 12M CD rates have crossed 10 per cent albeit below the level of 2008 economic crisis as given in the graph.


Which is bigger risk for India – Interest rate or inflation?
Many think-tanks say that inflation is a bigger risk in India because the economy becomes haywire because of it. However, this can be dealt with tighter monetary policies albeit in India, the structural and frictional issues are dominant factors in building up the inflation. To a large extent, the RBI has taken protective measures but few more hikes are imminent. The global commodity prices have also been roaring for which the US’s QE II should be blamed. This has affected the local domestic prices too to a large extent.
Moreover, the high fiscal deficit has been worsening. Though in the current financial year, the government has been successful in narrowing down the deficit, thanks to one-time big inflows from spectrum auctions. They might not be successful in future too.

What is expected in future?
The market participants expect massive government borrowing in the next fiscal year to be announced in the upcoming budget in last Feb to meet the increased expenditures which will lead to more bond supply. This will put upward pressure on yields. Also the liquidity deficit which will worsen further on account of advance tax outflows in the current quarter will take the short term rates high further. Moreover, banks have been issuing CDs aggressively to build their large balance sheet size, another reason to boost up the interest rates. Hence, an expected gradual rise in interest rates, given sticky inflation would add to hardening of bond yields.

- Happy Investing!
- Amar Ranu

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