India confident of keeping 2021-22 borrowing costs below 6% levels: Sources

Economy

Holding policy interest rates unchanged at record lows on Friday, Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das assured investors that its stance on liquidity remained accommodative and that the government’s 12.06 trillion borrowing programme for the fiscal year starting April would be managed in a smooth and orderly manner.

Reuters

February 08, 2021 / 11:30 AM IST

Reuters

Reuters

The Indian government is confident that it can obtain funds for its massive 2021/22 borrowing programme at below six percent, as the central bank has given assurances that it will provide liquidity, two senior officials told Reuters.

Holding policy interest rates unchanged at record lows on Friday, Reserve Bank of India Governor Shaktikanta Das assured investors that its stance on liquidity remained accommodative and that the government’s 12.06 trillion borrowing programme for the fiscal year starting April would be managed in a smooth and orderly manner.

“RBI has assured us that the borrowing for 2021/22, yields will be comfortable and we expect it to not top 5.9% for the fiscal,” one of the two sources said.

He added that the government’s long-term average borrowing cost is expected to be between 5.8%-5.9% in the fiscal year starting April.

Despite the pledge from the RBI, bond yields had surged on Friday as investors had been hoping for a more clarity in the form of a bond purchase calendar. Yields on most bonds however retreated later on Friday, following the debt auction results.

“The RBI has shown that it will not blink as was evident in the auction results,” a second source who asked not to be named as he was not cleared to discuss the matter publicly said.

The central bank sold only 90 billion rupees of bonds versus 310 billion it had set out to sell on Friday, with underwriters to the auction buying 88.1 billion rupees worth of the paper, after the market demanded higher yields.

“The RBI has done whatever the market has needed and wanted all of last year, so they need to trust the central bank. There is no question of an open market operations (OMO) calendar,” the source added.

RBI’s OMOs are dependant on its dollar buying interventions in the foreign exchange market, as it would automatically release rupee liquidity and not a tool to tame bond yields, thus providing a calendar is not feasible, the source explained.

The RBI did not immediately respond to queries while the finance ministry declined to comment.