India switches FY27 maturity bonds with central bank, issues 2040 paper

Feb 12 (Reuters) — India’s central bank said on Thursday that the government has bought back bonds ‌maturing in next fiscal year and issued ‌longer-dated 2040 securities as part of a switch operation with it.

The ​government bought back 755.04 billion rupees ($8.34 billion) of four securities maturing in financial year 2026-27 from the Reserve Bank of India and issued 694.36 billion rupees of the ‌8.30%, 2040 bond ⁠in exchange.

The 2040 bond was issued at a price of 110.45 rupees. The buyback ⁠prices of the shorter-maturity securities ranged between 100.28 rupees and 102.46 rupees.

Switch operations are part of the government’s debt ​management strategy, ​which allows it to ​ease near-term repayment pressure ‌by replacing shorter-term bonds with longer-dated ones.

The current switch is above the budgeted number and will ease redemption pressure for the next fiscal.

New Delhi plans to borrow a record 17.2 trillion rupees in 2026-27, Finance Minister ‌Nirmala Sitharaman said in her ​budget speech on February 1, ​about 17% higher ​than the current fiscal’s 14.61 trillion rupees.

The ‌Indian government will use various ​instruments, including bond ​switches, to ensure its record borrowings in the fiscal year starting April do not unsettle the ​market or push ‌up yields, a senior finance ministry official told ​Reuters earlier this month.

($1 = 90.5750 Indian rupees)

(Reporting ​by Nishit Navin in Bengaluru)