Business Standard

Short-term rates soar...

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As such, companies are witnessing a margin squeeze. The rise in financing cost is likely to exacerbate the situation. Mutual funds and banks are major buyers of commercial paper issued by companies. Demand from banks has almost evaporated due to lack of investible surplus at a time when they are struggling to provide enough for their bad debts. Besides, 11 banks are already under the prompt corrective action framework of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). This severely restricts their ability to lend or invest.

The prospect of a steep rise in bad debts looms after the RBI’s February 12 circular that suggested that banks must put a company through resolution process the moment the account extends its payment deadline of 90 days. In that case, a company will be declared defaulter and banks can put in motion a number of steps that could culminate in the company being referred to the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), said Prabal Banerji, group finance director at the Bajaj Group.

“Obviously, borrowers are finding it difficult to raise resources, and when they are managing to raise some, it is at a substantiv­ely higher rate. There is going to be no respite from this for India Inc for some years. The only exceptions are MNC and industries like FMCG and pharmaceut­icals,” Banerji said.

In the absence of banks, mutual funds have become the largest buyers of short-term paper. In order to provide higher returns to their investors, mutual funds are also asking for higher rates from companies. In most cases, there is no option but to oblige. Non-banking finance companies, which constitute 70 per cent of the corporate debt market, have increased their issuance in the market as most of them have increased their lending, Niyogi said.

The outstandin­g amount of commercial paper at the end of March 2018 was ~3.72 trillion, down from its yearago period of ~3.98 trillion, RBI data showed.

Compoundin­g the problem for corporates is the rising borrowing cost in longer dated securities as well.

The 10-year bond yield closed at 7.68 per cent on Tuesday, up from 7.34 per cent at the beginning of the calendar year. In between, yields had dropped to 7.13 per cent in early April as the government’s first half borrowing came in lower than what the market expected. But yields have started climbing again after minutes showed the RBI’s monetary policy members were unusually hawkish about rates, against the bearish outlook presented during the April policy.

Now that the US 10-year treasury is close to 3 per cent, after about four years, chances of Indian bond yields shooting up further is real. Even if the spread between corporate yields and government bond yields remain intact, the rising yields don’t bear good news for companies at a time when even banks are not ready to give them loans.

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