Is Now The Time To Invest In Long-Term Bonds?


BANGALORE: Long bonds are bond with a maturity period of more than 15 years and they also pay higher interest rates but have greater credit and inflation risk. Even if the Reserve bank of India had slashed the market's hopes of a rate cut, the financial planners and distributors are advising investors to invest half of their fixed income portfolio to a mixture of long-duration funds, gilt funds and tax-free bonds, which are better, poised to benefit from falling interest rates reports The Times of India.

The market is expecting the key policy rate to be cut by 75-100 basis points gradually over the next 12-18 months. As interest rates fall, bond prices will move up, thereby giving investors a capital appreciation. Rates and bond prices move in opposite directions.

"With crude prices moving down, to around $82 per barrel, and diesel prices cut, inflation will come down, which could help the RBI cut rates, early next year," says Lakshmi Iyer, head (fixed income), Kotak MF.

Long-term income and gilt funds may fetch superior returns as the yield on the 10-year benchmark falls. "The 10 year GoI benchmark which trades in the range of 8.15-8.2 percent could fall by 100 basis points over the next 15-18 months. This will give investors a higher capital appreciation in long-term income funds and gilt funds," said Dwijendra Srivastava, head, fixed Income, Sundaram Mutual Fund. Fund managers said the government's fiscal deficit numbers would also play a key role in the direction of the 10-year bond. If fiscal deficit is lower-than-projected, it could strengthen the rally in the bond market.

Financial planners, however, caution that there is a risk if a scenario emerges where interest rates do not fall as expected. Unit-holders could end up making a mark-to-market loss in the near term. "Investors with a high-risk appetite and a time frame of 18 months and above should shift a part of their portfolio from short-term funds to a mixture of income funds, tax-free bonds and gilt funds," said Vishal Dhawan, chief financial planner, Plan Ahead Wealth Advisors.

Typically, when rates fall, bond funds, tax-free bonds and gilt funds having a longer maturity, benefit the most. "A tax-free bond with a maturity of 10-20 years could give you a capital appreciation of 4-5 percent, if interest rates fall by 50 basis points," said Vikram Dalal, MD, Synergee Capital. If the bond is held for a year, the tax-free interest income would be 9 percent, thereby taking an investor's total returns to 14 pecent.