India
Inc. is on a borrowing spree. India Inc's growing appetite for
merger and acquisitions as well as other expansion plans has fuelled
a sharp jump in overseas borrowings by domestic companies. It
is expected to borrow well in excess of $20 billion in 2007 via
plain vanilla loans and bonds, including foreign currency convertible
bonds (FCCBs). Despite a hardening in global interest rates, leading
arrangers say cross-border financing will continue to remain an
attractive option.
Several factors have led to the rising attractiveness of offshore
borrowings. For example, a five-year loan facility for a top-rated
company is currently priced at 75 basis points over the London
Inter-bank Offered Rate (Libor), which is currently quoting at
4 per cent. Add on the costs for the one-year forward cover and
the withholding tax, and the all-in cost works out to approximately
9 per cent. In the domestic market, a five-year borrowing would
cost about 10 per cent. Also, the hike in the cash reserve ratio
(CRR) to 5.5 per cent by RBI has changed the local interest rate
scenario considerably. More so, as it comes on the heels of sagging
deposit growth at 20 per cent and growing credit offtake crossing
30 per cent.
Tightening Noose
Call it inflation impact. The government, which is going all
out to tighten money supply, is now taking a hard look at its
policy on foreign borrowings. In its bid to contain high-flying
inflation, the RBI has raised its short-term lending rate six
times by a total of 150 basis points since January 2006. Going
ahead, RBI would need to choose between a weak to stable currency
and hike in interest rates to cool overheating in the domestic
market.
Early indications suggest that it is unlikely to raise the ceiling
on external commercial borrowing (ECB) for 2007-08 from the current
$22 billion. Industry analysts believe that new sectors like housing
finance companies may not be given ECB access soon. Housing finance
companies and real estate developers have been pleading with the
government for ECB access for quite some time.
While RBI has been under pressure from corporates to allow greater
overseas borrowing, economists fear that the apex bank could end
up further tightening the noose if short-term borrowings continue
to surge ahead. Economists believe that if short-term borrowings
surge further, RBI could even cut down the maximum limit on overseas
corporate borrowings during a year.
The government's move to retain the ECB cap for 2007-08 at the
current level will come as a dampener to companies, considering
their large investment plans on the back of a high economic growth.
However, the central bank is currently more focussed on slowing
domestic demand growth and reducing inflationary pressure, wherein
it would have to allow further appreciation of the rupee against
the US dollar. This is despite the Indian currency having already
reached near its eight-year high with an appreciation of about
nine per cent to below 43 a dollar from the bottom of 47 in July
last year.
Not surprisingly, just about every banker feels that interest
rates can only move northwards from here on. Companies have no
option but to expand the number of banks they shop with and so,
too, the avenues. Observers point out that more and more mid-cap
companies are borrowing in the overseas loan market as they begin
to scale up.
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