Separator

India Inc may cross $20 billion Overseas Fundraising Record

Separator
As multiple companies raise funds for the first time in the coming months, India Inc is likely to see a surge in overseas borrowings, potentially setting a new record, as there is a persistent need for long-term project financing.

“Based on the pipeline, we are likely to cross the $20 billion overseas fundraising record that India witnessed in 2019,” says, Chetan Joshi, managing director and head of debt finance, HSBC India.

The primary drivers for such fundraising are an expected increase in financing needs for companies that have traditionally not raised money overseas, as well as demand from private equity and financial sponsors planning investments in local assets. Joshi also stated that the infrastructure sector continues to have a need for project financing.

“There is acquisition activity in the pipeline by financial sponsors. The demand from Indian companies for fresh funding or refinancing projects in sectors such airports, ports, energy, oil and gas and telecom remains strong,” said Joshi.

To be sure, the pace slowed in the second quarter of this year, which he attributed to borrowers' front-loading of capex plans rather than a demand taper.

“As the second wave (COVID) hit, the offshore bond markets behaved very maturely - we saw spreads widen a little bit and then start retracing. The offshore bond market has continued to form a very supportive backdrop to issuance, which would lead to acceleration of overseas fundraising activity from this quarter,” Joshi said.

India Inc. is a term commonly used by the Indian media to refer to the country's formal (government and corporate) sector. It employed 7% of the workforce in 2000[1] and contributed 60% of the nation's nominal GDP. According to a recent labour survey, the informal sector includes 44 million non-farm enterprises.