Home Feature Asia bonds soar on US rate cut bets, exports

Asia bonds soar on US rate cut bets, exports

by Aya El Sayed

Asian bonds saw their largest monthly inflow in three months in February, driven by expectations of a US Federal Reserve rate cut and strong regional exports, Reuters reported on Wednesday.

Foreign investors net purchased $4.41 billion of bonds in India, South Korea, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Thailand. Indian bonds saw a surge in demand with a net investment of $2.7 billion, the highest since July 2017, ahead of their inclusion in JP Morgan’s emerging market debt index.

South Korean bonds also attracted $2.59 billion, their largest inflow in nine months, boosted by a surge in exports, particularly in the semiconductor industry.

However, Thai, Malaysian, and Indonesian bonds saw net outflows. Despite expectations of no immediate rate cut, US central bankers may indicate a more gradual approach to interest rate reductions and a later start to policy easing.

ANZ’s head of Asia Research, Khoon Goh, expects the prospects of Fed easing, Asia’s improving export outlook, and a favourable growth-inflation mix to attract inflows into the region.

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