JM Financial MF plans shift to interest income strategy for bonds, exec says

India’s JM Financial Mutual Fund plans to shift its investment strategy towards ​earning interest
income from bonds while reducing “duration risk” as it expects
the central ‌bank to begin raising interest rates as early ​as
October, an executive said.

The bond markets rallied on ⁠Friday, after the Reserve Bank
of India kept its key policy rate and stance unchanged, and
announced a slew of measures to attract dollar ‌inflows.

Yields on bonds with maturities up to five years plunged
15-20 basis points and those on shorter-duration ‌corporate bonds
also dropped. The 10-year benchmark bond yield logged ‌marginal
declines.

Bond ⁠yields move inversely to prices.

“The strategic call may ⁠lean towards gathering accrual while
shortening duration,” JM Financial Asset Management’s Killol
Pandya told Reuters’ Trading India forum, referring to a
strategy that allows traders to ​lower their exposure to bonds
whose ‌prices are highly sensitive to interest rate changes.

The fund manages debt assets worth around 29 billion rupees
($303.18 million).



Many of the domestic tailwinds are behind us, including 125
bps ‌of rate cuts, the Goldilocks growth-inflation outlook and
upcoming El ​Niño concerns, he said.

While the market is divided over a rate hike at the RBI’s
next policy ⁠meeting in August, Pandya expects the central bank
to stand pat that month.

“As of now, I feel RBI may look ‌to act probably in the
October policy – that seems to be the base case. I think RBI may
retain its orthodox dosage of 25 bps per hike. As things stand,
the rate hike cycle may be in the range of 75-100 bps,” he said.

He expects the 10-year benchmark bond yield to ‌trade in the
6.90% to 7.10% range over the next couple of ​months and will
prefer a blend of sovereign and corporate bond exposures to
shore up accrual.

“The massive market volatility ⁠may be a trader’s playground
and I expect it to keep ⁠throwing up tactical opportunities,” he
said.

Sustained energy challenges could seep into inflation
expectations and prove difficult to reverse, Pandya ‌added. A
Reuters poll of economists estimated retail inflation
accelerated to 4% in May from 3.48% in April.

Source

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