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Indian lenders to chase after business bonds as brand-new financial investment guidelines start, treasury officials say

Indian banks will gravitate towards business bonds they intend to hold until maturity once brand-new central bank guidelines start next month, as yields are presently raised and the financial investments would be spared from marketlinked markdowns, treasury officials said.

From April 1, business bond investments will be permitted under held-to-maturity (HTM) classification for the first time, provided the fair value is divulged and investments secured from mark-to-market volatility, according to revised Reserve Bank of India rules.

Presently banks can hold up to 23% of their deposits under HTM as financial investments in federal government bonds and state debt and this cap will be eliminated in April.

The present yield spread of more than 50 basis points in favour of business bonds makes them an appealing investment.

From April, for the HTM portfolios, the AAA-rated bonds specifically of state-run companies are an attractive bet as they are yielding higher than the state bonds and do not bring much credit threat, VRC Reddy, treasury head at Karur Vysya Bank, stated.

The three-year to five-year federal government bond yields were in the variety of 7.06% -7.08%, while state bonds of comparable duration yield around 7.38% -7.42%.

In contrast, LSEG's AAA-rated benchmark three-five year business bonds were yielding 7.62% -7.70%.

Significant recipients would be highly rated and reputed names as banks would prevent even the smallest of credit risk for the HTM sector, the treasury authorities included.

The authorities have stated that bonds of AAA-rated state-run business such as Power Finance Corp, REC and Power Grid Corp might be the preferred choice.

Alok Singh, group head of treasury at CSB Bank, anticipates the spread between federal government and corporate bond yields to reduce below 50 basis points, also helped by enhancement in liquidity condition.

Some banks have already begun increasing exposure to corporate bonds, and this is anticipated to rise even more as they intend to catch the greater yields, Venkatakrishnan Srinivasan, creator and handling partner at Rockfort Fincap, stated.

Business bonds of some sectors such as facilities business could benefit more as banks attempt to satisfy their priority-sector lending targets by raising exposure to debt, a. treasury head of a state-run bank said, requesting privacy as. he is not authorised to talk to the media.

(source: Reuters)