10-year yield rises to 6.82% at 12:35 p.m. from yesterday's close of 6.64%; rupee gains 34 paise to trade at 70.98 a dollar
Having hard-currency assets overseas can be fruitful if the rupee falls
Brexit will keep driving investors into the safest assets, meaning demand will remain high for negative-yielding debt
The administration also set the budget deficit target for the fiscal year at 3.3% of gross domestic product
While the bond market is relatively conservative about their interest rate expectations, the currency market seems to be projecting that interest rates should be much sharper
The bond market has been stress-tested, and is seeing structural strengthening
The strategy is offering lenders extra returns
Barring a few, not many are willing to invest in this liquidity-deficit market
The 10-year yields closed at 7.85 per cent on Friday. It is a rather sharp move up from the 6.5 per cent level in August, when the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cut its policy repo rate.
A seasonal crunch in the banking system is becoming acute because of a buildup in the cash the government parks at the central bank
If the bond market stays bearish for an extended period, negative sentiment will feed into equities
In October this year, the government had announced an infusion of Rs 2.11 lakh crore capital into the public sector banks over a period of two years
It is likely that the market is anxious about a widening fiscal gap adding to extant inflation pressures bred by both domestic and global factors
RBI is clearly focussed on achieving its medium-term inflation target of 4% on a sustainable basis
10-year bond yield closed at 6.77% even as many illiquid bonds exchanged hands in the past two days
Expects long rally to end; eyes now on Trump & Fed moves in the US & what Budget to say on deficit
Estimates for the OMO vary between Rs 50,000 crore and Rs 1,50,000 crore. So far the central bank has already done OMO purchases of Rs 1 lakh crore
Bond markets suggest low yields are here to stay. Equity markets seem to indicate yields may be headed higher. Who is right?