A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, September 28, 2016
CB BOND BUYER SRI LANKA’S PERPETUAL TREASURIES PROFITS UP 434-PCT TO RS5.1BN
( Arjun Mahendran was forced to resign over the bonds issue)
Perpetual Treasuries Limited, a primary gilt dealership, connected the
family of a controversial former Sri Lanka central bank governor, has
made a profit of 5.1 billion rupees for the year to March 2016 up 434
percent from a year earlier, published data show.
The firm reported capital gains of 5.2 billion rupees from bond trading
in the year to March 2016, up 581 percent from 767 million rupees a year
earlier, accounts published in Sri Lanka’s Sunday Observer newspaper
showed.
Under central bank regulations, all primary dealers have to publish their accounts.
Return on beginning-of-the-equity of 1,065 million was 481 percent.
Sri Lanka’s bond markets were hit by a series of controversial bond
auctions involving allegations rigging and insider dealing in 2015 and
2016 during the tenure of ex-Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran.
Perpetual Treasuries is connected to Mahendran’s son-in-law and he came
under fire over conflicts of interest as long term bonds were sold at
high rates where large volumes.
Sri Lanka’s President Maithripala Sirisena declined to renew Mahendran’s
term of office amid the allegations, which became the focus of a
parliamentary inquiry.
Mahendran has denied wrongdoing.
Interest income at Perpetual Treasuries rose 162 percent to 942.8
million rupees and interest expenses rose 132 percent to 589.1 million
rupees, and net interest income rose 233 percent to 353 million rupees.
The majority of profits of a primary dealer however comes from capital
gains. Primary dealers in government securities, bids at government bond
auctions and sell them to other buyers making a margin.
The price of a government bond rise when interest rates falls and the price falls when interest rates go up.
When rates fall, a dealer with a portfolio can sell and make profits
from bond bought at a higher interest rate (low price). Interest rate
volatility provides opportunities for dealers to make gains by selling
down their portfolio.
Concerns were raised that after selling government bonds at high
interest rates (low prices) by accepting sharply higher volumes of bids
from favoured dealers effectively rigging the auctions, the bonds were
then dumped dealers at low rates (high prices) on the Employees
Provident Fund, which was managed by the central bank.
(Colombo/Sept27/2016 – recast/updated)
– ECONOMYNEXT