Indian and global equities extended the sell-off on Monday, as investors’ risk appetite continued to wane after US bond yields hit a four-year high, raising speculation that the Federal Reserve will raise policy rates more aggressively. The benchmark Sensex declined 309.6 points, or 0.9 per cent, to 34,757, its lowest close since January 16. The 30-share blue-chip company index has lost 1,150 points since Friday — its steepest two-day sell-off since November 2016, when high-value currency notes were banned. In intra-day trade, the Sensex was down as much as 545 points but managed to recoup some losses on buying support by domestic investors. The Nifty 50 index lost 94 points, or 0.9 per cent, to close at 10,667 — its lowest level since January 11. Most Asian and European markets, too, fell more than a per cent following Friday’s steep fall in the US markets. ALSO READ: As Sensex plunges 1,150 points in two days, Rs 5-trn investor wealth eroded The latest volatility is attributed to rising bond yields in the developed markets, which is prompting investors to rebalance their asset allocations. Experts say high yields are making risky stock investments look less attractive and also leading to concerns of earnings erosion due to higher borrowing costs. “The market has been underestimating how instrumental easy money has been in reflating risk assets. Corporate houses and governments have gone on a debt binge as credit was easily available and at low cost. Both factors are likely to reverse. This reduction of liquidity will hurt emerging markets more than developed markets, as they have indirectly been among the biggest beneficiaries of easy money,” said Rupal Bhansali, chief investment officer, global equities, Ariel Investments. The yield on the 10-year US Treasury note neared 2.9 per cent on Monday — a level last seen in January 2014.
The yield has increased 50 basis points since the start of the year. ALSO READ: Nifty down nearly 1% but holds 10,600; Sensex ends over 300 pts lower
