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Foreign inflows into Asian bonds hit six-month high in November

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Dec 15 : Foreign investors snapped up Asian bonds in November as they sought shelter from an equity market selloff driven by concerns over stretched tech valuations and uncertainty around the U.S. Federal Reserve’s rate outlook.

They bought a net $10.86 billion of bonds in South Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, India and Indonesia in November, marking their largest monthly net purchase since $15.29 billion of inflows in May, data from local regulatory authorities and bond market associations showed.

"Divergence between equity and debt assets emerged again in November, likely due to investors rotating to low-risk assets," said Khoon Goh, the head of Asia research at ANZ.

South Korean bonds drew $11.08 billion, the largest monthly net inflow since at least 2016, on optimism over their inclusion in the FTSE World Government Bond Index starting in April 2026.

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"We suspect that part of the strong inflows into South Korean bonds were diverted from the equity market," ANZ's Goh said.

Thai bonds recorded a third consecutive month of foreign inflows, totalling $319 million, while Malaysian bonds saw net foreign purchases of $316 million.

In contrast, foreign investors sold Indian and Indonesian bonds worth $447 million and $400 million, respectively.

The U.S. Federal Reserve last week cut interest rates by 25 basis points to a 3.50 per cent–3.75 per cent range, reinforcing expectations that lower U.S. borrowing costs would support regional assets.

Jonathan Davis, portfolio manager at PineBridge Investments, said that as equity valuations climb alongside lingering macro uncertainty, investors should remain focused on core fixed income and mindful of risk concentration in more indebted issuers.

"That is why we see a growing number of institutions looking toward the Asia-Pacific dollar bond market to maintain stability and diversify risks within their core fixed income portfolios."

Source: Reuters

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