Business Standard

NBFCs look to retail investors as banks tighten purse strings

- ASHLEY COUTINHO & ANUP ROY

As banks become increasing­ly risk-averse in lending to the non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), while mutual funds and insurance companies slow down their investment of debt papers from the sector, the firms are trying to lure retail investors with high yields in a falling interest rate environmen­t.

For the companies, nonconvert­ible debentures, or NCDs, also allow them to diversify their liability profile. The Infrastruc­ture Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS) fiasco and Dewan Housing Finance Corporatio­n (DHFL) defaults, both AAA companies before they stumbled last year, has complicate­d the situation for the NBFC segment, even as the government and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) are taking a plethora of measures to encourage banks to start lending to the sector. On Wednesday, RBI Governor Shaktikant­a Das said no big NBFC would be allowed to fail.

The RBI governor’s assurance should give investors enough confidence to start believing in the NBFC sector again, say bankers. And the high yields offered by the firms should be lucrative enough for investors.

“Corporate firms are trying to diversify their asset liability profiles and trying to reduce dependence on one or two sources of borrowing. With the RBI cutting interest rates, this may be a good time to raise funds via NCDs,” said an investment banker.

On Thursday, Tata Capital Financial Services, a subsidiary of Tata Capital, said it would hit the market with tranche 2 of its NCD to raise up to ~4,126 crore, of which ~500 crore would comprise the base issue.

Tata Capital is one of the few names exploring this avenue. Recently, JM Financial and IIFL have tapped the market. IIFL Finance is issuing secured and unsecured redeemable NCDs, totalling ~100 crore, with a greenshoe option to retain oversubscr­iption up to ~900 crore. JM Financial Products is raising ~500 crore through NCDs.

Many more are lining up with their offering.

These could include public sector undertakin­gs such as Rural Electrific­ation Corporatio­n (REC) and Power

Finance Corporatio­n (PFC), said bankers familiar with the matter.

According to the sources, both PFC and REC have filed request for proposal (RFP) to get bond arrangers about a month ago. Both the public sector units (PSUs) want to issue taxable bonds of ~10,000 crore each through several tranches in the current financial year (FY20).

This would also be their first taxable bond issuance after they came up with tax-free public bonds a few years ago. According to a banker, REC could issue ~5,000 core by the end of this month, while PFC would follow suit with ~2,000 crore issuance in the next month. However, the plan is not firm yet.

“It is likely that they have got an approval, and are sounding off the arrangers. There was a similar exercise by the National Highways Authority of India six months ago, but that did not fructify eventually,” said a senior bond arranger.

Meanwhile, Tata Capital Financial, which has a large book in the consumer finance and SME space, will offer investors the option to invest for three, five, seven and 10 years, offering interest rates ranging from 8.35 to 8.85 per cent.

The NCDs are AAA rated by CRISIL and CARE and will be listed on the NSE and the BSE. The issue is secured except for the 10-year option which is

sub-debt and unsecured.

This would mean the spread over the 10-year government would be substantia­l even for a AAA company, indicating the liquidity squeeze in the system.

The 10-year bond yield closed at 6.40 per cent on Thursday.

“We are competing with fixed deposits and not just the yields on G-secs. There are not too many AAA-rated issues coming to the market right now and the rates offered are attractive,” said Kiran Joshi, head - treasury, Tata Capital.

According to sources, HDFC, Reliance Industries, or its telecom subsidiary Reliance Jio, and UltraTech Cement may be some of the other corporate firms lining up for NCDs, ranging in size from ~1,000 to ~3,000 crore.

An HDFC official said they are raising money regularly through private placements, as it has plans to raise ~45,000 crore in FY20. However, it is unlikely that the company would come for public issuance. Emails sent to Reliance and UltraTech did not elicit any response.

The typical sources of borrowing for corporate firms include banks, dollar and masala bonds, corporate deposits, and commercial papers. Recently companies have started raising money via ECBs as well. Tata Capital Financial Services, for instance, has recently raised $50 million through ECBs and is looking to raise another $100 million by September 30.

The RBI guv’s assurance on NBFCs should give investors enough confidence to start believing in the sector again, say bankers

With inputs from Amritha Pillay

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