Australian Bonds Draw Foreign Investors With Higher Yields, Steeper Curve

 | Jul 21, 2020 05:09

Institutional investors scouring the globe for yield have found a new darling. Australian government bonds (AGBs) provide a few basis points in additional yield along with the security of a triple-A rated developed market.

Japanese institutions have dropped their traditional resistance to the relatively small market in the hunt for yield, even as Australian government borrowing has increased to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, creating more liquidity in the market.

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Japanese funds bought US$6.6 billion in Aussie bonds in May, the highest monthly total going back to 2005. Last week, Australia sold A$17 billion, equivalent to nearly US$12 billion, with more than A$50 billion in bids.

Japanese investors are not the only foreign buyers of AGBs, however. Some 45% of the sale earlier this month went to foreign investors, mostly in Britain and Asia, excluding Japan.

The Australian Office of Financial Management has scheduled an offer of bonds maturing in 2051 for next week, and analysts expect the government to sell somewhere between A$4 billion and A$8 billion, with investors in North America and Britain likely to show an interest.