S’pore 5-year note sale gets lowest yield in 26 years

Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
#11
(27-03-2013, 04:16 PM)AlphaQuant Wrote:
(27-03-2013, 03:49 PM)a74henry Wrote: Why will people lock their money in a 5 year bond that gives a return less than the inflation rate?

i think most interests are probably foreign - imagine if ur soverign bond is downgraded from AAA and u have a long duration need - with SGD on an appreciating path due to inflation and their numeraire getting sold off on recession, the net returns == 50bps + FX gains

prob better this way than to hold onto their local bonds which are getting sold off anyway.

Banks have to hold a large chunk of these bonds for liquidity purposes. Add to that investors looking for FX gains, if that's their primary investment thesis, these bonds have important qualities of being risk-free and highly liquid with narrow bid offer spreads.
Reply
#12
This is definitely not my kind of investment.
Reply
#13
(27-03-2013, 05:05 PM)chew Wrote:
(27-03-2013, 04:16 PM)AlphaQuant Wrote:
(27-03-2013, 03:49 PM)a74henry Wrote: Why will people lock their money in a 5 year bond that gives a return less than the inflation rate?

i think most interests are probably foreign - imagine if ur soverign bond is downgraded from AAA and u have a long duration need - with SGD on an appreciating path due to inflation and their numeraire getting sold off on recession, the net returns == 50bps + FX gains

prob better this way than to hold onto their local bonds which are getting sold off anyway.

Banks have to hold a large chunk of these bonds for liquidity purposes. Add to that investors looking for FX gains, if that's their primary investment thesis, these bonds have important qualities of being risk-free and highly liquid with narrow bid offer spreads.

If looking for FX gain or/and liquidity with AAA currency, looking at shape of yield curve (below), another alternative with just a little less yield is the 2-yr bond. If expecting CBs to increase rates within the next 2 years, wouldn't this be a better alternative? Huh

[Image: yieldcurve.gif]
Reply
#14
(27-03-2013, 06:48 PM)swakoo Wrote:
(27-03-2013, 05:05 PM)chew Wrote:
(27-03-2013, 04:16 PM)AlphaQuant Wrote:
(27-03-2013, 03:49 PM)a74henry Wrote: Why will people lock their money in a 5 year bond that gives a return less than the inflation rate?

i think most interests are probably foreign - imagine if ur soverign bond is downgraded from AAA and u have a long duration need - with SGD on an appreciating path due to inflation and their numeraire getting sold off on recession, the net returns == 50bps + FX gains

prob better this way than to hold onto their local bonds which are getting sold off anyway.

Banks have to hold a large chunk of these bonds for liquidity purposes. Add to that investors looking for FX gains, if that's their primary investment thesis, these bonds have important qualities of being risk-free and highly liquid with narrow bid offer spreads.

If looking for FX gain or/and liquidity with AAA currency, looking at shape of yield curve (below), another alternative with just a little less yield is the 2-yr bond. If expecting CBs to increase rates within the next 2 years, wouldn't this be a better alternative? Huh

[Image: yieldcurve.gif]

A fair point. In defence, the us yield curve is only marginally steeper to the 5 yr and this is a new benchmark issue.
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)