BusinessLine (Delhi)

NaBFID expects loan sanctions to top ₹2-lakh crore in FY25

To mop up ₹53,000 crore via bond market, bank and credit lines

- K Ram Kumar

The government-owned National Bank for Financing Infrastruc­ture and Developmen­t (NaBFID) expects its loan sanctions pipeline to swell to about ₹2 lakh crore by March-end 2025 against about ₹1 lakh crore as of March-end 2024.

To support loan growth, the developmen­t financial institutio­n (DFI) is planning to mop up about ₹53,000 crore this year via bond market, bank and multilater­al credit lines. The All India Financial Institutio­n was set up in 2022 under the NaBFID Act, 2021, as the principal entity for infrastruc­ture financing in the country

“We started our operations in December 2022. We sanctioned ₹18,560 crore in the January-March 2023 quarter and ₹83,280 crore in FY24. We crossed the ₹1-lakh crore (cumulative) loan sanctions mark in March 2024.

“Within this sanctions pipeline, about 35 per cent is for greenfield projects (predominan­tly in the power and roads segments) and 65 per cent is for brownfield (expansion) projects, refinancin­g existing infrastruc­ture assets, lending to NBFCs (in the infrastruc­ture space such as PFC and REC) and Infrastruc­ture Investment Trusts (InvITs),” said Rajkiran Rai G, Managing Director.

GROWING DEMAND

Demand for infrastruc­ture finance is gradually picking up, according to RBI’s data on sectoral deployment of credit. Scheduled commercial banks (SCBs) infrastruc­ture loans portfolio increased by 6.5 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) to ₹12,80,258 crore as on March 22, 2024, against 0.4 per cent growth to ₹12,02,605 crore as on March 24, 2023.

Rai emphasised that “For infrastruc­ture project developers, there are two benefits of dealing with us — we can give long-tenor loans (80 per cent of our loans are of 15-25 years duration) and we can give loans at a fixed rate with a longer re-set period. Generally, loans have an annual re-set, but if somebody wants a longer re-set, we can give that. These are our strengths.”

NaBFID’s outstandin­g loan book as of March-end 2024 was around ₹36,000 crore against about ₹10,000 crore as of March-end 2023.

“Today, as we speak, our outstandin­g loan book has grown to ₹45,000 crore. By September 2024, we may touch about ₹60,000 crore-70,000 crore. By March 2025, we are expecting disburseme­nts to touch ₹93,000 crore. In the case of infrastruc­ture loans, the disburseme­nts are slow and happen in a phased manner,” Rai said.

The DFI had raised ₹19,500 crore worth of bonds (₹10,000 crore of bonds of 10-year tenor and ₹9,500 crore of bonds of 15-year tenor) in FY24 to support loan growth. It also has more than ₹10,000 crore of bank credit lines.

WELL-CAPITALISE­D

In a March 2024 rating report on NaBFID, ICRA said that given the capital infusion (of ₹20,000 crore by the government), the bank remains well-capitalise­d and geared for expanding its scale in the near to medium term, which could lead to a gradual increase in the leverage — total debt/net worth (includes grants), which stood at 0.7 times as on December 31, 2023.

Today, our outstandin­g loan book has grown to ₹45,000 crore. By March 2025, we are expecting disburseme­nts to touch ₹93,000 crore

RAJKIRAN RAI G, MD, NaBFID

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