Business Standard

ECB approvals to go up to $40 bn in FY19

- ABHIJIT LELE

Approvals for External Commercial Borrowings (ECBs) in FY19 are expected to rise to $40 billion, from $29 billion in FY18, on relaxation in the limit on cost of funds, expanded list of borrowers, and the list of end use.

According to rating agency Icra, though overseas cost of borrowing is rising, they (costs) remain competitiv­e to domestic cost of borrowing for corporates.

Amid risk aversion of domestic investors and tight liquidity conditions, companies have, of late, increasing­ly sought to raise funds through overseas borrowings. This is reflected in 62 per cent growth in ECB approvals to $16.5 billion in H1FY19, as compared to $10.2 billion during H1FY18. Growth in approvals has been driven by the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) relaxation of ECB guidelines during April 2018, whereby it increased the all-in cost of ECBs, expanded the list of eligible borrowers that included HFCs, and expanded the overall list of end-use for ECBs. With recent depreciati­on of the rupee, investors’ appetite for masala bonds has weakened and firms will have to raise borrowings in foreign currency.

The aggregate funding cost of dollar-denominate­d ECBs continues to rise, driven by increase in LIBOR (London Inter-bank Offered Rate) rates, hedging costs, and reducing dollar liquidity. “Despite these challenges, the overall costing still remains competitiv­e vis-a-vis domestic sources. ECB approvals are expected to increase to $35-40 billion during FY19 from $28.9 billion in FY18. This is on the back of ongoing trends and various measures taken by the RBI, including borrowing of $10 billion permitted to oil marketing companies,” said Karthik Srinivasan, Group Head (Financial Sector Rating), Icra. In April this year, the RBI further liberalise­d its ECB policy to facilitate cheaper access of overseas funds.

The benchmark rate will be six-month dollar LIBOR or applicable benchmark for the respective currency. The RBI also permitted housing finance companies and Port Trust to avail of ECBs under all tracks. Bankers said an increase in ECBmoney will help bridge the deficit on current account and balance of payments.

India’s current account deficit stood at $15.8 billion (2.4 per cent of GDP) in Q1FY19 as compared with $15 billion (2.5 per cent of GDP) in Q1 FY18. The rise was due to a higher trade deficit. In Q1 FY19, there was depletion of $11.3 billion in foreign exchange reserves, on a BOP basis, as against an accretion of $11.4 billion in Q1FY18.

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