Fall in G-Secs yields: Banks may have reaped decent treasury gains in Q2FY25

K Ram Kumar Updated - September 29, 2024 at 06:09 PM.

Banks likely booked decent treasury gains in the second quarter (Q2) of FY25 as Government Securities’ (G-Secs) yields softened substantially and their prices rose correspondingly. Yield of the benchmark 10-year G-Sec (coupon rate: 7.10 per cent) dipped 25 basis points during the quarter up to September 27 (Friday) to close at 6.76 per cent vis-a-vis June-end yield of 7.01 per cent.

Correspondingly, price of this paper jumped ₹1.72 during the aforementioned period from ₹100.63 as at June-end 2024 to ₹102.35 as at September 27, 2024. Treasury gain/loss made on September 30 (the last day of trading in the second quarter) will be reflected in the third quarter. Bond yields and prices are inversely co-related and move in opposite directions.

In fact, last Friday, yield of the 10-year G-Sec rose 4 basis points to close at 6.76 per cent (vs pervious close of 6.72 per cent) as banks booked profits due to quarter-end considerations.

Karthik Srinivasan, Senior Vice-President and Group Head-Financial Sector Ratings, ICRA, said, “G-Sec yields have come off in the last one week to 10 days. So, I won’t be surprised if there was quiet a bit of trading activity by banks to book profit for the end of the quarter. The 10-year yield has come down from about 7 per cent (June-end level) to 6.75-6.76 per cent now. So, that is a fair bit of softening in yield. Hence, there will definitely be a good trading profit which will reflect in banks’ financial performance.”

New guidelines

V Rama Chandra Reddy, Head-Treasury, Karur Vysya Bank, observed that despite the fall in yields, treasury gains will not be as high as they used to be in previous quarters (in a similar falling yield scenario) due to the new investment guidelines effective April 1, 2024. These guidelines cap the amount banks can sell from their held-to-maturity (HTM) portfolio without regulatory approval and prohibit the annual shifting of securities from/to HTM, which was previously permitted.

Moreover, valuation gains from the fair valuation of G-Secs in the available-for-sale (AFS) portfolio are routed to the AFS-Reserve, considered part of the common equity tier (CET)-I capital, he added.

As per the new investment portfolio guidelines, in any financial year, the carrying value of investments sold out of HTM should not exceed 5 per cent of the opening carrying value of the HTM portfolio. Any sale beyond this threshold, which earlier required the approval of the Bank’s board, now requires prior RBI approval.

Published on September 29, 2024 12:39

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