Wednesday, 9 March 2016

Malaysia: Better prospects for Petronas as sukuk costs decline, petrol price up

KUALA LUMPUR: Petroliam Nasional Bhd (Petronas) is enjoying a twin boost as commodity prices rally and Islamic bond costs fall just as it considers borrowing.
The difference in yield between 10-year government sukuk and two-year securities shrank to a five-month low of 91 basis points last week from as high as 128 in early January, making longer-term financing attractive for issuers such as Petronas. That’s been helped by record foreign purchases of ringgit government bonds last month, a rally in the currency and a recovery in Brent crude.
Petronas last month posted its third loss in five quarters, announced plans to cut 1,000 jobs and said it might need to raise funds and tap cash reserves to cover capital expenditure and dividends. The decline in bond costs is also a bright spot for Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak, who’s seeking to finance a US$444bil development plan while contending with slowing growth.
“The flattening yield curve reflects the general perception that the pace of domestic economic growth won’t be strong,” said James Lau, an investment director at Pheim Asset Management Asia Bhd overseeing US$300mil. “The sweet spot remains for companies, especially those involved in development projects, to tap the loan and debt markets.”
Corporate sales of bonds that prohibit the payment of interest more than doubled in Malaysia to RM9.6bil in 2016 from a year earlier, according to data compiled byBloomberg. The ringgit rallied 4.7%, the best performance among 24 emerging-market currencies after Indonesia’s rupiah and the Brazilian real.
Overseas investors increased holdings of Malaysian sovereign ringgit bonds to an unprecedented RM176.7bil in February from the previous month as a global sell-off in equities at the start of the year boosted demand for fixed-income securities. When accounting for company notes, total ownership fell 0.6% to RM215bil.
“Demand-supply dynamics for Islamic bonds will stay favourable from the shift in asset allocation given the weakness seen in equities and other asset classes,” said Fakrizzaki Ghazali, a strategist at RHB Research Institute Sdn Bhd. “Nonetheless, this may not be a one-way affair as markets could be highly volatile again.”
The 10-year syariah-compliant yield fell 41 basis points in 2016 to a seven-month low of 4.11%, almost six times as fast as the decline on the equivalent two-year debt, according to Bank Negara indexes.
The possibility the central bank may ease monetary policy this year may also further support demand for bonds. Bank Negara unexpectedly cut the statutory reserve requirement for lenders at its last meeting in January and kept the benchmark interest rate at 3.25%. It’s also forecast by all 19 economists in a Bloomberg survey to hold the rate today.

Bank Negara expects inflation to tick higher to 2.5% to 3.5% this year from 2.1% in 2015 even as economists bet growth will weaken to 4.4%.

(The Star Online / 09 March 2016)
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Alfalah Consulting - Kuala Lumpur: www.alfalahconsulting.com
Islamic Investment Malaysia: www.islamic-invest-malaysia.com

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