India sees $3 billion debt fundraising rush as yields slump after RBI moves, bankers say

SHARE:

MUMBAI, June 11 (Reuters) – Indian companies are rushing to raise short-term debt after the central bank’s measures to support the rupee triggered ‌a sharp fall in borrowing costs, four merchant bankers said.

Companies, led ‌by non-banking financial firms, are raising more than 310 billion rupees ($3.24 billion) through up to five-year bonds ​this week, the bankers said. The supply is one-third of what was raised in April and May, according to Reuters data.

The Reserve Bank of India on Friday announced a raft of measures aimed at drawing dollars into the country, including raising subsidised deposits ‌and incentivising banks and state-run ⁠companies to raise funds overseas.

This has pushed corporate borrowing costs lower by 40-45 basis points, per LSEG benchmark ‘AAA’-rated corporate bond yields of ⁠up to five years, while the spread over government bonds has narrowed.

Corporate bond yields had risen to their highest in seven years in May.

A rise in overseas borrowings could ​reduce the ​need for local debt supply, leading to ​a rally in bonds below ‌five years, said Ajay Marwaha, head of fixed income markets at global wealth firm Nuvama.

State-run REC raised three-year funds at a coupon of 7.34% earlier this week, much lower than prevailing levels in the secondary market. NABARD, another state-run financial institution, raised funds for three years at 7.34% after cancelling a similar issue in May ‌where rates could have touched nearly 8%.

Other major ​non-bank lenders lining up debt sales include Bajaj Finance, ​Muthoot Finance, Bajaj Housing Finance ​and L&T Finance, with planned issuances of 85 billion rupees, 27.5 ‌billion rupees, 20 billion rupees and ​15 billion rupees, respectively.

Despite ​the recent rally in bonds, investor appetite remains strong on expectations of further gains.

“Investors with a more than 18-month investment horizon are looking at corporate ​bond funds that present an ‌attractive investment opportunity from a relative risk-reward perspective,” said Puneet Pal, ​head of fixed income at PGIM India Asset Management.

($1 = 95.6950 Indian rupees)

Leave a Comment