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Foreign holdings of Malaysian bonds eased

NST BUSINESS

KUALA LUMPUR: Foreign holdings of Malaysian bonds contracted RM2 billion in April, compared to RM12.3 billion in the preceding month.

Ram Ratings said this was attributed to the abatement of investors' panic in the preceding two months, which had been led by asset-management firms.

"The raft of global and domestic liquidity-boosting measures in April appear to have managed to assuage investors' fears while stabilising market sentiment," it said in a statement today.

The ratings agency said April still represented the third consecutive month of outflows, as foreign investors' appetite for emerging market assets remained constrained by heightened global uncertainties amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

"Foreign investors' less downbeat sentiment has also alleviated the upward pressure on yields," it added.

RAM said the potential 50 basis points (bps) cut in the overnight policy rate (OPR) in early May, had led to a broad-based decline in yields of government and corporate bonds in April.

The lowering of the Statutory Reserve Requirement (SRR) while allowing principal dealers to recognise up to RM1 billion of Malaysian Government Securities (MGS) and MGII as part of their SRR compliance may also have supported domestic demand for fixed-income securities, in turn lowering yields.

"The yield of the benchmark 10-year MGS plunged 51.3 bps to 2.90 per cent as at end-April, reversing the 56.9 bps surge of a month earlier," it added.

RAM said bond yields would still face downside pressure as recent measures broadening the usage of MGS and Government Investment Issue to meet SRR requirements should support demand for government bonds.

"Expectations of further OPR cuts in the second-half of 2020 should also keep domestic bond yields in check."

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