Fall in yields triggers rare $4.5 billion debt issue from Indian firms at fiscal year onset

By Dharamraj Dhutia

MUMBAI (Reuters) – Indian companies are set to borrow $4.5 billion by selling bonds in the first five trading sessions of April to take advantage of the plunge in yields, a rare move as they typically do not need major funds at the start of a new financial year.

The sales include planned issues worth more than $2 billion on Tuesday, the end of the five-day run that will have included at least 15 companies tapping the bond market.

Yields on AAA-rated up-to-five-year corporate bonds have dropped 25-30 basis points in April, while those for the longer-term papers have plunged 20-25 bps.

This “has triggered strong demand for bonds, pushing yields lower right from the beginning of April,” said Venkatakrishnan Srinivasan, founder and managing partner at debt advisory firm Rockfort Fincap. “This favorable shift has encouraged issuers to front-load their fundraising plans.”

The Reserve Bank of India has infused more than 5.20 trillion rupees ($60.62 billion) through debt purchases and foreign exchange swaps since the start of 2025.

Consequently, India’s banking system liquidity moved into surplus towards March-end and has now jumped to its highest level in the last five months. Additionally, the RBI plans to buy bonds worth another 600 billion rupees in April.

This unexpected rush of borrowing underscores the changing dynamics of India’s financial landscape, signalling potential benefits for investors and companies in the short term.

“The demand for stable returns, coupled with ongoing uncertainties in stock markets, naturally aligns with the risk-averse sentiment of investors,” said Vishal Goenka, co-founder of bond trading platform IndiaBonds.com.

Markets are expecting an additional 75 bps of rate cuts in 2025, after the central bank cut rate by 25 bps in February.

While most of the issuances are dominated by non-banking financial companies, which are selling shorter-duration papers, some state-run firms are also tapping the market with longer-tenor debt.

“State-run firms could lock in long-term funding at relatively lower yields. A well-rated state-run company tapping the market for five to ten years should comfortably achieve yields of 7% or lower, especially if the issue is structured well and demand is managed strategically,” Rockfort Fincap’s Srinivasan added.

Companies that have raised or plan to raise funds in billion rupees:

Companies Duration Funds raised/ in

the pipeline

Muthoot Finance 3 years 15

Shriram Finance 3 years 18.75

Muthoot Finance 3 years and 49 days 15

HDB Financial 3 years and 2 months 15

Tata Capital 3 year and 3 months 11.75

Aditya Birla Housing Finance 3 years and 5 months 6.65

LIC HF 4 years and 10 months 20

NABFID 5 years 14.7

Tata Capital 5 years 15

Bajaj Finance 5 years 30

Axis Finance 5 years 6

Shriram Finance 5 years and 3 months 18.75

India Infradebt 5 years and 5 months 10

Cholamandalam Investment 7 years 10

NIIF Infra Finance 7 years and 1 month 2.5

NIIF Infra Finance 9 years and 8 months 5

NABFID 10 years 42.4

Bajaj Finance 10 years 29.9

Bajaj Finance 10 years 40

Bajaj Housing Finance 10 years 20

REC 15 years 30

($1 = 85.7760 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Dharamraj Dhutia; Editing by Janane Venkatraman)

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