Business Standard

Cash-hungry companies are selling shares at record pace

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Companies in India are selling equity at an unpreceden­ted rate, seeking to prepare themselves for what’s forecasted to be the economy’s first contractio­n in four decades.

The country’s firms have sold $8.9 billion worth of new shares year-to-date, the most on record for such a period, according to data compiled by

Bloomberg. Banks account for more than half the total, having raised $5.6 billion this year.

Many of the largest deals have come from lenders, which are also on a record fundraisin­g spree, as they strive to strengthen balance sheets to cope with an expected increase in bad loans. Further, lockdowns imposed to fight the coronaviru­s outbreak have hammered businesses and left millions jobless.

Mumbai-based ICICI Bank is in the process of fetching as much as $2 billion in a qualified institutio­nal placement to strengthen its capital adequacy ratio. That’s set to be the largest primary additional offering by an Indian bank this year, Bloomberg-compiled data show. With that, sales of new shares in India would exceed all previous fullyear tallies.

The previous record was in 2017, which was another busy year for fundraisin­g by banks as bad loans in India’s financial system began to soar. Bankers expect the strong deal-flow to continue, especially as markets remain receptive amid abundant liquidity. India’s lenders may have to raise $20 billion of cash over the next year, according to Credit Suisse Group AG.

Of that amount in expected fundraisin­g, staterun banks are estimated to need $13 billion from the government to recapitali­se.

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