© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A man counts Indian currency notes inside a shop in Mumbai, India August 13, 2018. (Reuters)/Francis Mascarenhas
(This Jan. 9 story has been corrected to fix Novama Wealth Management assets under management in the fourth paragraph after the fund issued a correction)
by Bhakti Tambi
MUMBAI (Reuters) – Indian investors are looking to increase the debt ratio in their investment portfolios amid expectations of a peak in policy tightening and a desire for higher returns and diversification from expensive stock markets, analysts and fund managers said.
Debt investments offered hardly any increase in returns last year amid high volatility due to the Ukraine war, aggressive interest rate tightening by the US Federal Reserve and the Reserve Bank of India, along with sharp global inflation.
Meanwhile, yields stagnated in 2020 and 2021 as yields fell, after the pandemic prompted massive rate cuts.
“People feel we have reached the peak of the (hiking) cycle,” said Alok Segal, head of Nuvama Private, the Numava wealth management unit that has 27 billion rupees ($328.67 million) in assets under management.
“We’re already getting incoming demand from clients who are asking us for opportunities or ways they can secure returns, where they can set aside a reasonable amount of money for fixed income,” he added.
The 10-year government bond yield increased by 87 basis points in 2022, while the yield on AAA-rated short and medium-sized government bonds increased by 150-200 basis points.
As corporate valuations have risen over the past two years, so has the opportunity cost of investing in stocks, driving more money flows into the debt markets.
Equity markets, particularly in India, have performed exceptionally well over the past three years as local investors invested their savings in equities amid negligible or even negative returns from fixed income assets due to low rates and high inflation.
Transition from stocks to fixed income
Onmesh Kulkarni, fund manager, said the total return to maturity of debt mutual funds has increased to 6.75-7.75% from 4.5%-5.5% in 2021, providing a “very good” entry point for investors in the medium term. Director and Senior Consultant, Julius Baer India.
With inflation still rising globally and the continued risk of higher interest rates from global central banks tipping economies into recession, 2023 is likely to be a challenging year for equity markets.
“Weakening global economic growth is not good news for stocks,” said VK Vijayakumar, chief investment analyst at Geojit Financial Services.
Vijayakumar said he expects fixed-income assets, including government and corporate debt, to yield returns of more than 8% this year, compared to less than 6% in 2022.
Nuvama’s Saigal said returns could be over 10% if investors are willing to take the risk and hold longer in their portfolios.
Possible headers
Analysts said that while 2023 looks relatively better for fixed income in India, it is not without its share of uncertainty.
Although the RBI is expected to moderate the pace of interest rate hikes in the future, global central banks may be relentless given stubbornly high inflation.
“The global situation is the most important risk at this point in time,” said Julius Baer Kulkarni.
“This could restrain the RBI from stopping too early, as any pressure in interest rate differentials could negatively affect flows into Indian debt markets and also put pressure on the INR, which has already suffered badly over the past year.”
($1 = 82.3310 Indian rupees)
($1 = 82.1500 Indian Rupees)