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Indian lenders double fundraising via infrastructure bonds on capex pushBanks raised over 58,400 crore rupees via infrastructure bonds in 2023 and India's largest private lender HDFC Bank raised 74,25,000 crore rupees through 10-year bonds at an interest rate of 7.71 per cent on Monday, December 18.
Reuters
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>HDFC Bank logo.</p></div>

HDFC Bank logo.

Credit: Reuters Photo

Mumbai: Indian lenders doubled the amount of funds raised via longer-term infrastructure bonds this year, as increased federal government spending on long-term projects created lending opportunities.

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Banks raised over 58,400 crore rupees ($7.04 billion) via infrastructure bonds in 2023 compared to 29600 crore rupees raised in 2022, data compiled by Reuters showed.

India's largest private lender HDFC Bank raised 7,42,500 crore rupees through 10-year bonds at an interest rate of 7.71 per cent on Monday.

The bank did not respond to a Reuters email seeking comment.

Peers Axis Bank and ICICI Bank are likely to raise 50,00 crore rupees each before the end of the month, while state-run institutional lenders NABARD and NaBFID will look to raise 1,00,00 crore rupees each through such offerings later this week, merchant bankers said.

State-run lenders have raised 44,718 crore rupees via such papers, while private players have raised 13,715 crore rupees.

The federal government aims to spend 10,00,000 crore rupees this fiscal year on long-term projects to boost growth.

Spending by states has also picked up. Sectors such as roads, thermal power, renewables and cement are seeing a pick-up in activity, leading to lending opportunities, said Arnab Choudhury, head of debt capital markets at SBI Capital Markets.

The construction sector is also selectively seeing more spending, said Choudhary, who expects fundraising via infrastructure bonds to remain strong into next year.

Lender Tenor in Month Quantum in Coupon years billion rupees in per cent SBI 15 Jan 97.18 7.70 Kotak Mahindra Bank 7 Mar 3 7.63 Kotak Mahindra Bank 7 Jun 19.9 7.55 SBI 15 Jul 100 7.54 SBI 15 Sep 100 7.49 Canara Bank 10 Sep 50 7.54 ICICI Bank 10 Sep 40 7.57 Canara Bank 10 Nov 50 7.68 Bank of Baroda 10 Nov 50 7.68 HDFC Bank 10 Dec 74.25 7.71

Infrastructure bond issues have seen active participation from long-term investors such as retirement funds and insurance companies, allowing for such funds to be raised at lower spreads, said Mataprasad Pandey, vice president at financial advisory firm Arete Capital.

The spreads, or additional interest sought by investors, has ranged from 20-40 basis points over comparative government bonds.

Infrastructure bonds fulfil the need for investments in the 7-10 year bucket for insurance companies, Rahul Bhuskute, chief investment officer at Bharti AXA Life Insurance, said, "We expect more infrastructure bond issuances by banks with strong demand from insurance companies and pension funds."

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(Published 19 December 2023, 12:03 IST)