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INDIA BONDS - India bonds remain steady as traders wait for new triggers

Indian government bonds were barely traded in early Monday deals, as traders did not react to any new domestic or global signals.

As of 10:10 am IST, the yield on the benchmark bond for a 10-year term was 6.2926% compared to Friday's closing of 6.2947%.

The trading volume was low at the beginning of the week. However, investors will be keeping an eye on U.S. Treasury counterparts, who have been trending lower since Asian hours.

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note was at 4.3319 percent, slightly lower than Thursday's increase, following data showing that more jobs were created in June than anticipated.

Brent crude futures fell 0.72% to $66.76 per barrel.

A trader in a primary dealer said, "Foreigners have been buying Indian Bonds lately. We are closely monitoring that for future direction."

"Public sector banks are selling bonds for a while, so someone will have to absorb this. If foreign investors continue buying, we could see a rally in bonds."

The trader said that bonds would still trade in a range. The 10-year yield should be between 6.28% and 6.32%.

Foreign investors increased their purchases of Indian government securities under the Fully Accessible Route last week.

CCIL data revealed that investors bought bonds worth 87 billion rupees (about $1.02 billion) under the FAR in this period.

State-run banks sold net bonds last week worth approximately 143 billion rupees.

Early deals in India's overnight swap index (OIS), which is a derivative of the Indian stock market, showed little change as trading volumes were low.

The liquid five-year swap rate was a fraction lower, at 5.67%. $1 = 85.7075 Indian Rupees (Reporting and editing by Khushi malhotra)

(source: Reuters)