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Showing posts from September, 2017

NHPC gets shareholders’ nod to raise Rs 2,000 cr via bonds

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State-run hydro power giant NHPC today said its shareholders have approved the proposal to raise Rs 2,000 crore via issuance of non-convertible debentures on private placement basis. The special resolution to authorise board to raise Rs 2,000 crore via the secured/unsecured, redeemable, taxable/tax-free, cumulative/non-cumulative, non-convertible debentures/bonds, in one or more series/tranches, aggregating through private placement, in domestic market was passed by the requisite majority, NHPC stated in a BSE filing. Besides, the shareholders approved the proposal for final dividend at the rate of 1 per cent on the paid up equity share capital, that is 10 paise per equity share. The board in its meeting held on May 30, 2017 recommended “a final dividend at the rate of 1 per cent (Rs 0.10 per equity share) on the paid up equity share capital of the company for 2016-17, excluding interim dividend at the rate of 17 per cent (Rs 1.70 per equity share) paid in January, 2017.” The sharehol

India to decide October-March borrowing at September 28 meeting: Finance Ministry source

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India will decide its October-March government borrowing amount on Thursday, a finance ministry official said on Tuesday. The government has said it will borrow 3.72 trillion rupees ($56.92 billion) via bonds during April-September, comprising 64 percent of its full-year borrowing. However, market participants expect the government to borrow more than the estimated amount in the second half of the fiscal year ending March, given its plans for fiscal stimulus to boost the economy which will entail higher-than-budgeted spending.

Masala bonds now part of ECB; FPIs can now raise Rs 44,000 cr more under corp debt

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Masala bonds or rupee-denominated bonds issued overseas would now be part of only external commercial borrowings and not be part of the overall limit of corporate bonds to allow about Rs 44,000 crore more funds under corporate debt. Essentially, this amount pertaining to such bonds would be separately allocated to the investors, and it would essentially increase the corporate bond investment limit for foreigners. The issuance of such bonds overseas will now be within the aggregate current limit of Rs 2.44 lakh crore (Rs 244,323 crore) for foreign investment in corporate debt. This includes issuance of the masala bonds by resident entities of Rs 44,001 crore (including pipeline), which will be released over the next two quarters — Rs 27,000 crore in the third quarter, and Rs 17,001 crore in the fourth quarter, RBI said. An amount of Rs 9,500 crore in each quarter will be available only for investment in infrastructure sector by long term FPIs — Sovereign Wealth Funds, Multilateral Agen

Rupee opens marginally higher against US dollar

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Mumbai: The rupee on Monday strengthened marginally against the US dollar, tracking gains in the Asian currencies market. The home currency opened at 64.07 a dollar. At 9.15am, the rupee was trading at 64.04 a dollar, up 0.06% from its Friday’s close of 64.08. On Friday, the Reserve Bank of India reported current account deficit (CAD) data that soared to a four-year high of $14.3 billion, or 2.4% of the gross domestic product (GDP), in the June quarter as gold imports picked up ahead of the implementation of the goods and services tax (GST). In the March quarter of 2016-17, CAD was 0.6% of the GDP at $3.4 billion. Bond yields hit a fresh 15-week high. The 10-year bond yield was at 6.607% compared to its previous close of 6.597%. Bond yields and prices move in opposite directions. The benchmark Sensex index rose 0.30% or 95.83 points to 32,368.44. So far this year, it has risen over 21.09%. So far this year, the rupee has gained 6%, while foreign institutional investors (FIIs) have bou

Record inflows just the beginning for high-yielding India, Indonesia bonds

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Kuala Lumpur/ Singapore/ Mumbai:  Asia’s highest-yielding bonds are holding on to their fans, with top investors saying they’ll keep buying Indian and Indonesian debt—even if policy makers don’t keep easing. Rupee- and rupiah-denominated bonds lured a record $29 billion of inflows this year, with central banks in India and Indonesia reducing key interest rates amid lacklustre inflation and subdued growth. While swaps traders don’t see India cutting again this year and economists are mixed on the rate outlook for both countries, firms like Mirae Asset Global Investments Co. and Schroder Investment Management Ltd remain bullish on debt that offers the highest yields in Asia. “In a stable global environment with the world’s four major central banks very cautiously removing post-crisis unorthodox monetary policies thanks to low inflation, investors will continue to look for yield,” said Rajeev De Mello, head of Asian fixed income at Schroder, which oversees $543 billion globally. Yields t

HDFC to raise Rs 2,000 cr via bonds tomorrow

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Mortgage lender HDFC will raise Rs 2,000 crore by issuing bonds on private placement basis to augment its long-term capital. “The object of the issue is to augment the long-term resources of the Corporation. The proceeds of the present issue would be utilised for financing/refinancing the housing finance business requirements of the Corporation,” HDFC said in a filing. The issue to raise Rs 2,000 crore will open tomorrow and closes the same day. HDFC said the company will specifically address the persons who are eligible for the debenture issue and no other person can apply for it. Stock of HDFC traded 0.24 per cent up at Rs 1,759.75 on BSE.