Troubled Indian shadow bank Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services Ltd, whose recent debt defaults sparked concern about contagion in the nation's financial markets, secured a lifeline after shareholders approved its plans to raise money through debt and equity.
Stockholders green-lit IL&FS' plans to raise as much as Rs 150 billion ($2.1 billion) through a non-convertible debt issue, hike the firm's borrowing limit by 40 per cent to Rs 350 billion and increase its share capital to enable a rights offering, the company said in a filing.
The firm finances infrastructure projects across the world's fastest-growing major economy and is considered systemically important by the central bank. Its defaults on commercial paper from August sparked concern among households holding mutual funds invested in such debt, and forced banks and mutual and pension fund managers to brace for further losses.
IL&FS' investors include biggest Indian insurer Life Insurance Corp, top lender State Bank of India, largest mortgage lender Housing Development Finance Corp and Japan's Orix Corp. VK Sharma, the chairman of biggest shareholder LIC, on Friday said the beleaguered group can raise Rs 600 billion by selling assets.