The government relaxed on Friday rules for external commercial borrowings, allowing non-banking finance companies to raise overseas loans, subject to approvals. |
A finance ministry statement said that housing finance companies, with approval from the Reserve Bank of India, would be allowed to issue foreign currency convertible bonds. |
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The government also raised the repayment limit of external commercial borrowings to $200 million from the current $100 million |
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The Housing Development Finance Corporation (HDFC) is likely to be the first off the block among housing finance companies to raise an FCCB. |
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The corporation had already taken shareholder approval in July 2004 to raise $500 million. |
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HDFC is also likely to raise funds through the ECB route in keeping with its past practice of raising at least 10 per cent of funds from the overseas market. |
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Eighteen months back, the government had clamped down on housing finance companies from raising funds through the overseas market. |
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This was a dampener for many housing finance companies, which had a preference to part fund their requirement from the overseas market. |
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Many finance companies including Housing and Urban Development Corporation as well as HDFC had earlier submitted proposals to the central bank for raising ECBs. |
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"Overseas funding is attractive today considering that the 5-year US swap rate stands reduced to below 5 per cent for the first time in a year," said a senior treasury official at a leading NBFC. The 5-year swap rate is usually used to price convertible debentures. |
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Overseas interest rates have seen a fall in the past couple of months. HDFC for instance, refinanced its earlier ECB at London inter-bank bid-offer rate (Libor) plus 41 basis points (bps), down from Libor plus 85 bps. |
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The refinancing of the balance amount of $110 million (12 billion yen) has saved the housing finance major 45 basis points, stated industry sources. |
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