Pulse Alternative
Bonds

Corporate Bond Issuances Rise 28 PC in June on Lower Yields, Improved Market Sentiment


Mumbai: Fundraising through corporate bonds jumped 28 per cent year-on-year in June as lower yields on government securities, easing borrowing costs and improving market sentiment prompted companies to return to the debt market after a subdued two months.

According to Prime Database data, Indian companies raised Rs 1.33 lakh crore through corporate bond issuances in June, compared to Rs 1.04 lakh crore in the year-ago period and Rs 93,675 crore in May.

“The sharp increase in corporate bond issuances during June was primarily driven by a favourable shift in market conditions after a relatively muted April and May. The most important catalyst was the significant decline in benchmark government securities (G-Sec) yields, which reduced borrowing costs across the corporate bond market,” said Venkatakrishnan Srinivasan, managing partner at Rockfort LLP.

Mataprasad Pandey, vice president at Choice Wealth, said the surge in issuances was driven by factors such as the US-Iran peace deal, which pulled Brent crude towards the USD 70 mark, easing concerns over inflation and fiscal slippage.

Most issuers deferred their borrowing plans during April and May due to elevated yields, geopolitical uncertainties and volatile crude oil prices. However, in June, as uncertainty receded, corporates had an opportunity to tap the bond market and raise funds at lower rates.

Yields on Indian government securities eased sharply after the Iran-US peace deal, which led to a sharp correction in the Brent crude oil prices in the international market.

According to Srinivasan, the rally in the bond market was supported by strong foreign portfolio investor inflows into government securities, expectations surrounding India’s inclusion in the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Bond Index, easing crude oil prices during most of June, improving monsoon progress and the Reserve Bank of India Governor’s remarks that it was premature to discuss interest rate hikes.

Softening in benchmark G-Sec yields was transmitted to the corporate bond market, leading to lower pricing for AAA-rated issuers and allowing companies to raise funds at rates lower than those available in April and May.

Pandey added that the RBI’s recent measures, along with strong domestic demand and foreign inflows into the debt market, contributed to a broad-based bond rally during the month.

On the outlook, Srinivasan said primary market activity is expected to remain healthy through at least the first half of the current fiscal year, although issuances could become more opportunistic amid rising global uncertainties.

He cautioned that renewed geopolitical tensions in West Asia, higher crude oil prices, global inflation trends, US monetary policy and foreign portfolio investment flows would be key factors influencing domestic bond yields and issuance activity in the coming months.

However, India’s improving monsoon, calibrated liquidity conditions maintained by the RBI and robust domestic institutional demand continue to support the corporate bond market, he said.

(Disclaimer: Except for the headline, this article has not been edited by HDFC Sky editorial team and is auto-generated from PTI feed.)

Disclaimer

At HDFC SKY, we take utmost care and due diligence in curating and presenting news and market-related content. However, inadvertent errors or omissions may occasionally occur.
If you have any concerns, questions, or wish to point out any discrepancies in our content, please feel free to write to us at content@hdfcsec.com.
Please Note: The information shared is intended solely for informational purposes and does not make any investment recommendations



Source link

Related posts

Big week in the muni primary market for prepaid energy bonds

George

CI Capital Successfully Concludes EGP 2,214 Mn Securitized Bond

George

What you need to know for smart investing now

George

Leave a Comment