The Reserve Bank of India released cut-off yields for state government securities across eleven states, with total borrowings coming in at ₹141.86 billion against a targeted ₹145 billion. The slight shortfall indicates selective participation from some states while yields across securities reflected current market conditions and investor appetite for sub-sovereign debt.
India's state governments continue relying on bond markets for financing development expenditures, infrastructure projects, and fiscal requirements. The latest auction results reveal nuanced pricing across states with varying credit profiles, maturity preferences, and borrowing needs during the current fiscal year.
Auction Results Reflect Market Dynamics
Eleven states participated in the latest State Government Securities auction, collectively raising ₹141.86 billion slightly below the targeted ₹145 billion. Notable partial acceptances include Assam accepting ₹7.05 billion in the re-issue of its 7.22% SGS 2032 security, and Manipur accepting ₹4.8 billion in a seven-year security, indicating some states preferred limiting borrowings at prevailing yield levels.
Yields Across States And Maturities
Cut-off yields varied meaningfully across states and tenors. Chhattisgarh's 2040 security cleared at 7.8312 percent while its shorter 2031 paper was priced at 7.4195 percent, reflecting the typical upward slope of yield curves. Kerala's securities across three maturities cleared between 7.7949 and 7.8567 percent while Madhya Pradesh's longer dated 2056 paper priced at 7.8546 percent, reflecting term premium in longer duration bonds.
Northeastern States See Higher Yields
Manipur, Meghalaya, and Mizoram attracted higher cut-off yields of 7.75 percent, 7.77 percent, and 7.85 percent respectively, reflecting market perception of relatively higher fiscal risk or lower liquidity in securities from smaller northeastern states compared to larger and more financially established states like Tamil Nadu, Kerala, and Uttar Pradesh.
Southern States Remain Active Borrowers
Tamil Nadu participated with three separate securities across different maturities, with yields ranging from 7.5987 percent on the 2032 paper to 7.8100 percent on its 2041 security. Kerala similarly issued across three tenors, demonstrating that larger states continue actively managing their debt profiles by spreading maturities to avoid refinancing concentration risks.
State Borrowing Auction Highlights
- Eleven states raised ₹141.86 billion against target of ₹145 billion
- Shortfall suggests selective state participation at prevailing yield levels
- Assam accepted partial amount of ₹7.05 billion in re-issue of SGS 2032
- Manipur accepted partial ₹4.8 billion in seven-year security
- Northeastern states Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram priced at higher yields
- Tamil Nadu and Kerala active across multiple maturities and tenors
- Yield differentials across states reflect credit perception and liquidity factors
- Longer duration papers attracting higher yields reflecting term premium
- Bihar's 2051 paper cleared at 7.8684 percent reflecting long tenor pricing
Sources: Reserve Bank of India auction results, state government securities data