"I think the surge in equity markets post-elections will result in higher interest for IPOs but the overseas bond raising will be about the same size as this year...May be we can have a 10-15 per cent surge," RBS Managing Director and Head of International Banking for India and Southeast Asia Brijesh Singh told PTI over the weekend here.
In fact, the interest rates in the western markets started inching up mid-May last when the then Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said he would start reducing its bond buying by USD 10 billion every month, which finally stated in November.
After this only a handful of companies like ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, Exim Bank, IRFC, IDBI Bank and Bharti Airtel among others sold bonds overseas worth USD 3 billion.
Most of the money raising will be done by corporates for their refinancing requirements and also by the state-run companies for acquiring assets abroad, he said.
Additionally, there shall also be interest from banks which are benefiting from the Basel-III framework under which such a debt raising is considered as equity, he said.