Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) may become the first Indian corporate to kick off an external commercial borrowing (ECB) programme in calendar 2005. |
According to investment banking sources, the company proposes to raise around $300 million five-year loan through the ECB route for funding its capital expenditure and refinancing its existing foreign currency portfolio. |
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Sources said the company is expected to officially give mandate for the deal to investment banks by this month-end. |
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"The company will get a fine price as the spat between the two brothers has not affected its loan servicing capability. The five-year facility could be priced within a band of 80-85 basis points spread over London inter-bank offered rate," said a banker. |
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One basis point is one- hundreth of a percentage point. Libor is the international interest rate benchmark at which the corporates raise funds overseas. |
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In response to an email, the company's spokesperson said: "Reliance is continuously exploring opportunities to raise debt capital within its overall financial objectives. We will inform as soon as any transaction is finalised." |
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The six-month Libor has shot up to 2.84 per cent against 1.8-2 per cent few months back. The six-month forward premium on dollar is hovering around 2 per cent. |
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Senior bankers in the international loan syndication market said the spread of papers floated by Indian corporates has shrunk. This is because of shortage of supply of AAA-rated papers as most corporates raise loans and not bonds, which are more liquid. |
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"Even if it's a loan, the existing pricing of bonds will influence the pricing of the loan as well," said a banker. |
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A five-year medium term note (MTN) recently issued by the State Bank of India to raise $ 400 million is trading at a spread of 71 basis points over Libor. |
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Similarly, an ICICI Bank paper which used to trade at 100-125 basis points over Libor earlier is ruling at a spread of 88 basis points. |
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