Monsoon Season Likely To Cloud Indias Bond Rally

India’s bond rally is petering out as expectations for more rate cuts by the central bank are fading and the all-important monsoon season comes into focus.

Predictions for below-average rain by a private forecast earlier this month has raised the spectre of increasing food costs combining with higher oil prices, even as the state-run weather office on Monday said the monsoon is likely to be in the lower end of the normal range. That risk may stay the hand of the Reserve Bank of India from adding to two rate cuts this year even though economic growth is weakening, according to ICICI Bank. Yields of the nation’s most-traded 2028 bonds have advanced by 12 basis points since the central bank on April 4 disappointed traders by retaining a neutral policy stance.

“June rate-cut expectations have been unwound and a cut is now being priced much later in the year, partially because of the uncertainty due to monsoons,” said B Prasanna, head of global markets group at ICICI Bank.

“The full impact of monsoon rain on inflation will not be known by June and the RBI is understandably always fearful of sharp spikes in inflation.”

On April 3, Skymet Weather Services Pvt Ltd said the June-September monsoon is likely to be weak this year due to the El Nino weather pattern.

The weather office does see a more benign scenario, however – rainfall is likely to be 96 per cent of a long-term average. Rains between 96 per cent to 104 per cent of the average is deemed near-normal.

Last year’s monsoon rainfall was 91 per cent of the long-term mean, falling under the met department’s definition of a below-normal monsoon and missing forecasts for normal falls for a second year.

Summer rainfall and its distribution largely determine crop output and is among the most important factors in guiding food inflation.

“How rains will pan out will have a huge bearing on inflation,” said Naveen Singh, head of fixed income trading at ICICI Securities Primary Dealership in Mumbai.

“Any bounce-back in food inflation will be sharp.” India’s consumer-price index rose 2.86 per cent in March as food prices climbed. That’s the fastest pace in five months. Scarcity of rains may hurt harvests and further boost food prices, which account for about a half of the inflation basket.

“The monsoon outcome and its impact on inflation will be among the major factors guiding RBI policy,” said Prasanna. “The bond curve is likely to steepen further as there is no immediate visibility of a cut.”

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