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INDIA BONDS - India bonds have their worst week since six years; oil and rupee slumps hurt short-end debts, swaps

The Indian government bonds suffered a'sharpest weekly decline in six weeks,' due to a?continued surge in U.S. Treasury and oil yields. This was compounded by the'stagnant fall of the local currency, which has reached record lows.

Fears of central bank rate hikes were also heightened by the 'constant' bearish movement in key fundamentals, resulting in the underperformance of shorter-duration bonds and swaps.

Gurvinder Singh wasan, a senior fund manager with Baroda BNP Paribas Mutual Fund, said: "Geopolitical tenseness, higher commodity prices, in particular oil prices, and the depreciation of currency has resulted in an deterioration in inflation, current account deficit, balance of payments and fiscal debt."

On Friday, the yield on the benchmark 2035 bond of 6.48% ended at 7.0644% while the yield on the five-year bond of 6.36%?"2031 closed at 6.8633%. The spread has narrowed from 30 bps to 20 bps - the lowest level in two months.

Prices and yields are inversely related.

The Indian rupee fell in all five sessions of this week and reached an all-time high on Friday at 96.1350, as rising oil costs intensified economic challenges. Key indicators are beginning to show signs of strain.

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note jumped by almost 20 basis points to 4.55%, due to the fact that the Federal Reserve is unlikely cut rates further. Brent crude's benchmark contract rose 7% and moved closer to $100 per barrel as bets on supply worries increased. Donald Trump has stated that he's losing patience with Iran.

"We assume crude averages $95.bbl - for the full year - and bring forward our first rate hike from February to December, with a risk of an earlier move if West 'Asian Crisis persists causing a disorderly increase in energy prices."?ICICI Primary Dealership stated.

India's overnight swap rates for indexes jumped throughout the week. The spread between one-year and five-year swaps was reduced due to rate hike fears, which could flatten the curve.

The five-year rate ended at 6.71 percent and the one-year swap closed at 6.17%. Spreads have shrunk to 54 basis points from 66 basis points last Friday.

(source: Reuters)