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Bond Traders Risk Being Burned If India Fails to Make Index

Overseas investors are pouring into Indian bonds, putting the securities at risk of losses if a long-awaited inclusion into global indexes once again fails to take place.

Bond Traders Risk Being Burned If India Fails to Make Index
Bond Traders Risk Being Burned If India Fails to Make Index

Overseas investors are pouring into Indian bonds, putting the securities at risk of losses if a long-awaited inclusion into global indexes once again fails to take place.

Bond purchases by global funds under the so-called Fully Accessible Route jumped to 42 billion rupees ($529 million) in August, the most since January. They have already snapped  up an additional 31 billion rupees of the securities in September.

The inflows have added fuel to a bond rally driven by optimism that JPMorgan Chase & Co. will announce the inclusion of Indian debt in its emerging-markets index as early as the middle of this month. Any disappointment may damp sentiment and lead to a selloff, according to Quantum Asset Management Co.. 

Bond Traders Risk Being Burned If India Fails to Make Index

India’s benchmark 10-year yields dropped about 40 basis points from their June high of 7.62%, to close at 7.20% on Thursday. In contrast, similar-maturity US Treasury yields jumped 43 basis points since the end of that month. 

Read More: Russia’s Exclusion May Pave Way for India into Global Index

“The only thing driving the Indian bond market is the index-inclusion theme,” said Pankaj Pathak, a fixed-income fund manager at Quantum Asset in Mumbai. “If by any chance we don’t get that, I wouldn’t be surprised to see 10-year yields returning to 7.50%.”

(Updates bond prices in fourth paragraph)

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