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India Borrowers May Find Overseas Loans Costlier Ahead

Indian firms have enjoyed the cheapest foreign-currency loan costs in more than a decade, but as banks become more selective.

India Borrowers May Find Overseas Loans Costlier Ahead
A U.S. one dollar banknote and Indian ten rupee banknotes are arranged for a photograph in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Indian firms have enjoyed the cheapest foreign-currency loan costs in more than a decade, but may find the tides turning as banks become more selective.

That’s the view of Sandeep Bhatt, Mumbai-based senior regional manager for India at Export Development Canada, which has been active on Indian loans including major recent deals such as NatSteel Asia Pte, a unit of Tata Steel Ltd. Spreads on investment-grade dollar loans for Indian borrowers may rise over the next six months, he said.

That adds to forecasts that the good days for many Indian companies in the offshore loan market may soon be over, just as local lenders struggling with mountains of non-performing debt grow pickier, making borrowers more reliant on international creditors. The timing isn’t ideal, as the Federal Reserve’s monetary tightening also pushes up dollar rates. United Overseas Bank said in May that India may be approaching a turning point for loan pricing.

“If rupee liquidity isn’t available due to non-performing loan issues of Indian banks, it does have a ripple effect on both availability and pricing of offshore loan transactions,” according to Bhatt.

India Borrowers May Find Overseas Loans Costlier Ahead

So far this year, it’s generally been a borrower’s market. Indian companies have paid average margins of 118 basis points on five-year dollar syndicated loans, the lowest since 2005, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

But in some cases the paltry margins have meant that fewer lenders are willing to participate, leaving companies at the mercy of a smaller group of relationship banks.

This comes at a time when local lenders are grappling with more than $210 billion of non-performing assets. Stress on the banking system will persist despite the government’s plan to give more capital support to state-owned lenders this fiscal year to March 2019, Moody’s Investors Service said in a report.

Some recent examples that have added to speculation about a possible market turn:

  • Yes Bank Ltd. increased the margin on a $400 million loan it launched in July by 15 basis points points from a similar facility just a few months earlier
  • State Bank of India’s $750 million facility failed to attract banks to join in syndication after being launched in May

To contact the reporters on this story: Mariko Ishikawa in Sydney at mishikawa9@bloomberg.net;Anurag Joshi in Mumbai at ajoshi53@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Andrew Monahan at amonahan@bloomberg.net, Anand Basu

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.