India set to draw billions of dollars more inflows as JPMorgan bond inclusion begins

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India’s debt has become a favorite among emerging market investors, attracted to the nation’s robust economic growth and a stable currency,

India’s debt has become a favorite among emerging market investors, attracted to the nation’s robust economic growth and a stable currency.

PHOTO: AFP

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India is set to draw billions of dollars more inflows when JPMorgan Chase & Co adds the nation’s government bonds to its emerging markets index on June 28, opening up a US$1.3 trillion (S$1.8 trillion) market to a broader range of investors.

Global funds have already poured close to US$11 billion into index-eligible bonds since JPMorgan’s announcement in September. The US bank expects US$20 billion to US$25 billion to come in over the next 10 months, raising foreign ownership to 4.4 per cent from 2.5 per cent currently.

India’s debt has become a favourite among emerging market investors, attracted to the nation’s robust economic growth and a stable currency, which comes courtesy of the central bank. Both sovereign and corporate notes are headed for a sixth straight quarter of foreign inflows, a streak last seen 11 years ago, data compiled by Bloomberg shows.

“Most of the flows we’re seeing are driven by investors who are tracking the index and should be fairly sticky,” said Mr Vikas Jain, head of India fixed income, currencies and commodities trading at Bank of America. “Declining debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio, stable macros and favourable demand-supply for India’s bonds are positive factors.”

For global investors, Indian bonds offer access to a high-growth, high-yield market. The nation’s sovereign debt has outperformed its index counterparts over the past decade, according to JPMorgan.

Indian government debt is Asia’s top performer so far in 2024, returning 5.3 per cent compared with a 1.3 per cent gain in Indonesian local currency bonds, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Within JPMorgan’s so-called Fully Accessible Route bonds eligible for index inclusion, 28 securities worth more than US$400 billion will give India a 10 per cent share in the index at its peak. That is a similar weighting to China’s.

“Upon inclusion, India will have the single highest duration across the index, with an above average yield to maturity,” JPMorgan strategists wrote in a note this week. BLOOMBERG

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