States can be now confident of seeing their bond issuance going through in this financial year in the light of the Centre reducing its borrowing programme and bond yields falling to reflect the sentiment. On Tuesday, three states held back issuing their bonds worth Rs 34 billion, of the Rs 88.5 billion planned by nine states. Yields on central government bonds rose sharply that day following the comments of a Reserve Bank of India (RBI) deputy governor that lenders should not come to the apex bank for relaxations on their mark-to-market losses. As a fallout, investors asked for steep rates on state development loans on offer. Karnataka had to pay eight per cent for its 10-year bonds, but Andhra Pradesh (Rs 9 billion), Maharashtra (Rs 15 billion), and Tamil Nadu (Rs 10 billion) refused to sell their papers, auction results showed. How much of coupon investors wanted could not be known, but it can safely be said yields were at the vicinity of what Karnataka paid for its 10-year bonds. There was demand for the papers, as the results showed bids were received well above the plan, but the coupon asked for was definitely high. “Those states that have comfortable cash positions can afford to delay the issuance till the yields cool down. These states will come back soon. The market appetite is there for a price,” said a bond dealer, who buys state loans. On January 9, Tamil Nadu had paid 7.77 per cent to its investors for raising Rs 20 billion through 10-year bonds. Similarly, Andhra Pradesh had paid 7.76 per cent.
Karnataka, which paid eight per cent on January 16, had paid 7.79 per cent on January 2, same as what Tamil Nadu had paid at that time.
So, it is apparent that investors do club Karnataka and other states within the same category and yields on these bonds had increased 24-25 basis points (bps) in just a week. Comparison with the benchmark is not valid here as a new 10-year paper was introduced in between. Nevertheless, the rise in yields was not that dramatic except on Tuesday, in reaction to RBI Deputy Governor Viral Acharya’s comment. The yields have fallen after the government cut down the extra borrowing programme to Rs 200 billion, from Rs 500 billion earlier. The benchmark yields cooled about 20 bps on Wednesday as a result.