Foreign Investors Remained Net Buyers Of Malaysian Debt Securities

Foreign investors remained net buyers of Malaysia’s debt securities for the sixth consecutive month in June (RM5.2b; May: RM3.0b), rising to a three-month high

Total foreign debt holdings increased (RM267.9b; May: RM262.7b), with its share of total outstanding debt rising to a nine-month high (13.8%; May: 13.4%). The domestic bond market may have benefitted from the US Fed’s decision to keep rates unchanged in June and amid foreign outflows from Chinese bonds over the past four months, due to China’s sluggish
economic recovery, the PBoC’s rate cuts, and investor concerns over China-US tensions. This trend persisted despite narrowing yield differentials between Malaysian and developed market bonds, as well as tepid global risk sentiment due to hawkish posturing by the Fed.

According to Kenanga, the greater inflow was primarily driven by an increase in holdings of Government Investment Issues (GII) and Malaysian Islamic Treasury Bills (MITB), despite a smaller increase in Malaysian Government Securities (MGS) GII (RM3.6b; May: -RM0.8b): foreign holdings share of total outstanding bonds increased (9.7%; May: 9.2%). MITB (RM1.3b; May: RM0.7b): foreign holdings share rose to a six-month high (15.3%; May: 12.1%). MGS (RM1.6b; May: RM3.8b): foreign holdings share edged lower (35.9%; May: 36.0%).

For the equity market, foreign investors remained net sellers for the tenth consecutive month in June. Foreign outflows rose (-RM1.4b; May: -RM0.7b) amid subdued risk sentiment ahead of the US FOMC meeting. Overall, the capital market registered a greater net inflow of RM3.8b (May: RM2.3b), a three-month high. Foreign inflow ws into the bond market to strengthen further should the Fed continue to keep rates unchanged The 10-year US Treasury average yield increased by 16 bps to 3.75% in June, whilst the 10-year MGS average yield rose by 4 bps to 3.76%, narrowing the average yield spread further (1.2 bps; May: 12.7 bps).

However, Kenanga notes that the Foreign inflows into the domestic bond market may taper slightly in July, given the narrow yield differentials against developed market bonds, with the 10Y MGS-UST spread currently negative. And expects foreign demand for bonds to strengthen from August onwards, now that BNM has likely finished raising rates, and based on
expectation that the Fed will maintain an unchanged funds rate until a potential pivot in 1Q24.

Domestic bonds may also continue to benefit from portfolio outflows from China towards Emerging Asia, as the region’s largest economy is weighed by tepid growth recovery and mounting political risk. Meanwhile, we reckon the upcoming local state elections will only have a negligible impact on foreign interest in domestic bonds.

The house also believes that BNM has concluded its policy normalisation cycle and will keep the overnight policy rate at 3.00% for the rest of the year, on the expectation that both core and headline inflation will continue to moderate.

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