Their role in fuelling the success of the US shale industry offers lessons for India's economy today
Also, watch out for a company raising money at a very high rate of interest
Some market participants say there is still room for upside for long-duration products
Global drivers are also supportive as US yields harbour expectations of a dovish US Fed and a likely rate cut at the meeting later this month
Foreign investors have slowly started liquidating some of their holdings in local debt paper, as rising bond yields and the rupee's weakening bias make their investment not lucrative enough at a time when the US economy shows early signs of recovery.It is not that they are liquidating en masse; utilisation of their permitted limits show there is very little space left to invest. And, this is also a threat for local investors. In February, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) sold $421 million in debt; in March so far, they have sold $133 mn. However, in January, they had bought $1.5 billion in debt.FPIs have exhausted 96.66 per cent of their permitted investible limit of Rs 1.913 trillion in government debt. In the case of corporate debt, they have exhausted 99.8 per cent of their limit of Rs 2.253 trn.However, the sell-off in February should not be seen as an arbitrary case. It could, say bond market experts, be seen as a precursor of things to come. Here's why:For a foreign investor, .