Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

HDFC Bank said to consider relying on India for share sale

- Bloomberg feedback@livemint.com

FUNDRAISIN­G PLAN Lender weighs seeking all the capital through a qualified institutio­nal placement in domestic market

HDFC Bank Ltd, the world’s most expensive major lender, is considerin­g relying entirely on the Indian market for a share sale that could raise as much as ₹15,500 crore ($2.3 billion), people with knowledge of the matter said.

The Mumbai-based bank is weighing seeking all the capital through a qualified institutio­nal placement in India, rather than its usual practice of splitting the fundraisin­g between an offering of local stock and a sale of American depositary receipts, according to the people. HDFC Bank aims to start taking investor orders within the next couple of weeks, the people said, asking not to be identified because the informatio­n is private.

HDFC Bank is focusing on an offering in India because it hasn’t finished preparing its latest financial statements under US accounting standards, which it would need for an ADR sale, according to the people.

It wants to proceed with the fundraisin­g soon in order to take advantage of the current market sentiment, the people said. India’s benchmark stock index has posted four straight weeks of gains, the longest stretch since April, amid optimism that economic growth will be boosted by good monsoon rainfall.

The planned share sale would rank as one of the biggest-ever

MUMBAI/HONG KONG:

Indian equity offerings in localcurre­ncy terms, data compiled by Bloomberg show. HDFC Bank, helmed by chief executive officer Aditya Puri, has consistent­ly maintained a low bad-loan ratio by limiting its exposure to heavily indebted Indian companies and lending to the country’s growing middle class.

HDFC Bank said in December its board had approved a potential equity offering of as much as ₹24,000 crore, with its parent company Housing Developmen­t Finance Corp. planning to invest ₹8,500 crore. It will use the money to boost its capital buffers and support its growth plans for several years, deputy managing director Paresh Sukthankar said last week.

The lender is still waiting on some regulatory approvals before launching the share sale, the people said. The timeline could slip, and details of the offering may still change, according to the people.

HDFC Bank appointed arrangers including Bank of America Corp., Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse Group AG for the offering, Bloomberg News reported in March. It also appointed JPMorgan Chase & Co., Edelweiss Financial Services Ltd, IIFL Holdings Ltd. and JM Financial Ltd, people with knowledge of the matter said at the time.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? HDFC Bank CEO Aditya Puri
MINT/FILE HDFC Bank CEO Aditya Puri
 ??  ?? SpiceJet chairman and MD Ajay Singh
SpiceJet chairman and MD Ajay Singh

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