Yield on 10-year Treasury bonds seen sideways
By Melissa Luz T. Lopez,
Senior Reporter
TREASURY BONDS (T-bonds) on offer this week will likely fetch higher yields than current market rates as investors take a wait-and-see stance ahead of a policy meeting in the United States, while tracking rate movements offshore amid worsening geopolitical tensions.
Traders interviewed聽on Friday聽said the 10-year T-bonds which will be auctioned off this week will likely see the average yield move sideways from the rate fetched last month.
The government is looking to raise P15 billion worth of reissued debt papers聽on Tuesday, which have a remaining life of nine years and seven months. The papers were first awarded in May and were returned on the auction block on Aug. 22 and came with an average rate of 4.718%.
For this week, the first trader said yields will range from 4.55-4.65%, while another gave a 4.57-4.65% range. If realized, this would sustain a decline in interest rates coming from the original 4.75% coupon rate of the 10-year debt notes.
The debt notes were quoted at 4.5631% at the secondary market聽on Friday聽afternoon.
鈥淩ates might be slightly lower from the previous auction but from the secondary market it鈥檚 higher because of the recent US CPI (consumer price index) data was higher than expected. [There鈥檚 also] the fear of hawkish statements from the Fed[eral Reserve] come聽Sept. 19-20,鈥 one trader said in a phone interview.
US inflation picked up in August after five straight months of missing expectations, Reuters said in a report, which some players took as a renewed impetus for the Fed to consider raising rates for a third time this year by December.
However, the trader pointed out that the supposed upward push from developments in the US economy will be 鈥渃ountered by rising geopolitical tensions,鈥 following North Korea鈥檚 latest missile launch on Friday over Japan, a known US ally. Escalating fears pulled US Treasury yields down, a move that will be tracked by peso-denominated papers.
South Korea鈥檚 President Moon Jae-in and US President Donald J. Trump agreed to exert stronger pressure through sanctions on North Korea following its nuclear and missile tests, South Korea鈥檚 presidential office said following a telephone call between the two leaders on Sunday.
鈥淭he two leaders agreed to strengthen cooperation, and exert stronger and practical sanctions on North Korea so that it realizes provocative actions leads to further diplomatic isolation and economic pressure,鈥 Blue House spokesman Park Soo-hyun said in a televised briefing.
Another trader said market players will be waiting for cues ahead of the Fed鈥檚 policy meeting this week in anticipation of signals as to when they will next raise rates.
鈥淔or the past few days, the market has been quiet but in terms of taking positions, the demand is more on the short end or less than 10 years. There will be demand, but with the anticipated possible rate increase by the Fed, they [investors] will be on a wait-and-see,鈥 the second trader said.
Key statements to look for at this week鈥檚 Fed policy meeting would be its plans on unwinding its balance sheet, which is expected as the central bank鈥檚 immediate move towards rate normalization.
Both traders said the Treasury could still make a full award of its offer during the auction, with demand expected to be at least 1.5 times to twice the planned amount.
The government is looking to borrow as much as P195 billion from domestic sources this quarter through Treasury bills and Treasury bonds. —聽with Reuters


