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The biggest holders of India’s sovereign debt are dumping them. State lenders have been selling Rs 4.7 billion ($73 million) of government bonds on average every day this year, hurt by deep portfolio losses, data from the Clearing Corp. of India show. Last year, their net daily inflows totaled Rs 368 million, and in 2016, the run rate was at Rs 3 billion a day. Their sale in a market where there’s a paucity of buyers is contributing to a vicious downward spiral, where losses keep worsening.
It will be difficult for debt auctions to sail through without participation from the state banks when Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s new borrowing program begins in April, according to Sandeep Bagla, associate director at Trust Capital Services in Mumbai. Graph courtesy: Bloomberg
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