Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) today sold treasury bills worth Rs 400 crore following a bearish outlook in the government securities market. |
According to custodian foreign banks, which operate on behalf of FIIs in the debt market, the heavy selling followed the sharp depreciation in spot rupee from 43.92 last week to a low of 44.34 today. FIIs took the opportunity to book profits in t-bills, said a dealer. |
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Another reason cited by dealers was that the market had already factored in a 25 basis points hike in reverse repo in the forthcoming credit policy. One basis point is one hundreth of a percentage point. |
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At the auction of dated government securities held on Thursday, the market was expecting either a devolvement on the RBI or a higher cut-off yield in 11.83 per cent 2014 paper. |
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"If this happens, the yield at the shorter end will go up leading to losses in the treasury bills portfolio," said a dealer. Debt FIIs have heavily invested in treasury bills. |
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According to market dealers, the RBI might set a cut-off yield of 7.28 per cent for the 11.38 per cent 2014 paper, which is a high premium paper. |
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Thus, it has been priced almost 25 basis point higher than the yield of 7.06 per cent for the most liquid 7.37 per cent 2014 gilt. The rupee slipped to 44.34 to a dollar after opening at 44.20/21 and closing at 44.28/29. The market got jittery following the negative FII inflows over the last two days,. |
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