Asian debt spreads narrow

11 Nov, 2009

Asian bond spreads narrowed to their lowest in three weeks on Tuesday as gains in equities markets encouraged investors to pile into riskier assets, while others covered short positions after a recent selloff. The Asia ex-Japan iTraxx investment-grade index narrowed by 9 bps to 103/110 basis points, a Singapore-based trader said.
It was the tightest level since October 20's 99/102 bps. The index widened by about 10 bps last week as investors became wary of new issues in the region. "This is mainly a reaction to what happened to the stock market in the US overnight," the trader from Singapore said. "The market is on a bullish track after some consolidation in the previous week."
Recently sold bonds from Indonesian coal miner Bumi Resources and Chinese developer Agile Property extended gains. Bumi's 7-year debt was quoted at 102.125/102.625 cents on the dollar, up from 100.25/100.50 on Monday, traders said. Agile's 7-year bond traded at 100.625/101.125 cents on the dollar, higher than Monday's 98.75/99.5. "Some dealers are short covering and there is an awful lot of real money demand," a trader from Hong Kong said.
Asian shares rose on Tuesday, after US stocks hit a 13-month high on Monday, spurred by a G20 finance ministers' pledge to keep emergency measures in place until the global economic recovery was assured. Philippine bonds gained for a third day, with the country's debt due in 2034 traded at 98.50/99.00 cents on the dollar, up from 97.50/98.50 on Monday, a Manila-based trader said.
The country's 5-year credit default swaps (CDS) narrowed 3bps to 170/180. Issues of bonds denominated in dollars, euros and yen have raised about $8.5 billion in October, compared with $47 billion raised in the first nine months of the year, averaging a shade over $5 billion each month.

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