India’s 10-year benchmark government bond yield slipped marginally to 6.4839% on Thursday from 6.4934% in the previous close. The small move reflects steady demand for sovereign debt amid rising expectations of a near-term policy rate cut and stable foreign investor flows into local bonds.
The yield on India’s 10-year benchmark government security eased by about 1 basis point to 6.4839%, signalling a mildly positive tone in the sovereign bond market. Traders attribute the move to consistent buying interest from domestic institutions as well as supportive global cues, with US yields off recent highs and crude prices contained. A softer yield indicates slightly higher bond prices as investors seek duration ahead of possible monetary easing.
Market participants remain focused on upcoming inflation data and the next monetary policy review, where a dovish tilt or clear forward guidance could reinforce the rally in longer-tenor bonds. The modest yield decline also suggests that traders are balancing rate-cut optimism against lingering concerns over government borrowing and global risk sentiment, keeping movements in a narrow range.
Key highlights:
10-year benchmark yield at 6.4839%, down from 6.4934% previously.
Decline of roughly 1 basis point signals marginal price gains in the benchmark bond.
Buying driven by expectations of a future policy rate cut and contained global yields.
Investors watching inflation prints and central bank commentary for further cues.
Yield action remains range-bound as markets weigh fiscal borrowing needs and global risks.
Sources: Real-time bond market data and financial newswire reports.