Thursday, March 18, 2010

Borrowing calendar to be finalised on March 29


BS Reporters / New Delhi/ Mumbai March 18, 2010, 0:18 IST

Officials from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the finance
ministry will finalise the borrowing calendar for the next financial
year on March 29. This is amid expectations the exercise
will be front-loaded.


This means the goverment will schedule a major part
of borrowings in the first half of the financial year.

This eases pressure on liquidity for borrowing by the private
sector in the second half of the financial year.

“We have not decided whether the borrowing programme will
be front-loaded like last year. At present, all options, of borrowings being front-loaded, back-loaded and evenly spread out throughout the year are open. The decision will be taken after taking the views of all concerned,” said a senior finance ministry official.

The official said the requirement of government funds was just one input. “The other important points are the expenditure pattern of states and the private sector, repayment of loans, expected bond yields, market liquidity and inflation,” he said.

The Centre’s gross borrowings are budgeted at Rs 4,57,000 crore, Rs 6,000 crore higher than this year (a record). On a net basis, the government will borrow Rs 3,45,010 crore in 2010-11, compared to Rs 3,98,411 crore this year. This year, the government completed two-third of its borrowing in the first half of the financial year to avoid putting pressure on fund-raising by the private sector.

The market expects the government to follow a similar strategy next
year too as credit demand is low at the moment and is expected to
pick up in the coming months. Besides, unlike last year, the tools
available are fewer as the balance under the market stabilisation
scheme was estimated at 7,737 crore on March 5, as
against 88,077 crore a year ago.

High borrowings and expectations of monetary tightening in the
wake of higher inflation saw the yield on the benchmark 10-year
government paper reaching a 17-month high of 8.02 per cent last week.
Traders are not ruling out the yield touching 8.5 per cent in the weeks ahead.

Inflation is widely expected to reach double digits next month,
compared with 9.89 per cent in February, raising expectations
of RBI increasing policy rates when it announces its annual policy on April 20.

“It (the yield) will go around the 8.5 per cent level before peaking,
but it is tough to predict the time-frame.

Once auctions start, yields may go up. But without supply, you are
not going to see too much price action,” said a senior executive
at ICICI Securities Primary Dealership.

Today, the yield on the benchmark paper fell to the lowest
in a week as traders sought to cover short positions
following the recent sell-off.

The yield on the 6.35 per cent security maturing in 2020
hit a low of 7.93 per cent and closed at 7.95 per cent.

It has been around 8 per cent for a week and breached the mark
last week to touch 8.02 per cent.

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