Nearly three weeks after the unprecedented and surprising move by RBI to cut the repo rate by 75bps, reverse repo by 90bps, granting forbearance to borrowers, injecting more system liquidity, and offering long-term repos for corporate bond purchases, the yields of the 10-year government securities are on fire. The 10-year rate that had fallen to 6 per cent on the day of the announcement has been hovering near 6.50 per cent levels firming up by nearly 50bps from the bottom. The 10-year G-Sec was trading at 6.22 per cent before the announcement. The impact of COVID-19 on economies across the world is becoming apparent. There is huge pressure on fiscal and monetary authorities to offset some of that damage. This has happened despite overnight inter-bank rates floating in the 1-3 per cent range – much below the reverse repo rate of 4 per cent -- both because of the glut of surplus system liquidity and the inability of financial market participants exploit arbitrage opportunities between the interbank rate and the reverse repo rate. The first state government auction (also known as State Development Loans (SDLs)) for FY21 pushed state bond yields to almost 8 per cent. However, the next auction fared better due to its smaller size. The spread of state bonds over G-Secs is still almost twice the normal level. SDL are more than 300 bps above the policy rate. With SDL rates hardening so much, corporate bond yields will inevitably tighten in tandem.