Srei Infra and Equipment Finance have debt obligations of over ₹29,000 crore

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The Reserve Bank of India is expected to soon initiate the process of resolution of Srei Infrastructure Finance and Srei Equipment Finance, and experts expect it to get a high level of interest from potential investors.

“The RBI’s move is a clear statement that RBI doesn’t believe the promoter and management team of Srei is capable of resolving the stress. Also, with the success of DHFL’s insolvency resolution, RBI and lender group must be confident of value preservation and a credible resolution even for Srei,” said Bikash Jhawar, Partner, Saraf & Partners.

Also see: RBI supersedes boards of two debt-laden Srei companies

He added that he expects a reasonably high level of interest in the Srei business with economic outlook, especially in infrastructure and manufacturing, looking good.

“Srei has deep linkages with brick-and-mortar companies and promoter groups in India and those relationships may be quite a draw,” he further said.

Debt obligation

Resolution bound Srei Infrastructure Finance and Srei Equipment Finance have debt obligations of over ₹29,000 crore with bank facilities of over ₹28,000 crore.

“There will be a lot of interest in the Srei companies. DHFL has paved the way for successful resolution of financial services companies,” said another expert who did not wish to be named.

Revised credit ratings

According to CARE Ratings’ recent note in March this year, Srei Equipment Finance has long-term and short-term bank facilities of ₹16,912.21 crore, non-convertible debentures (NCDs) of a little over ₹352 crore, unsecured subordinated Tier II NCDs of ₹109.8 crore and perpetual debt of ₹37.5 crore.

By March, Srei Infrastructure Finance had short-term and long-term bank facilities of ₹11,117.71 crore, long-term infrastructure bonds of ₹20.22 crore, NCDs of ₹95.9 crore and unsecured subordinated Tier II NCDs of ₹594.51 crore.

According to an Acuite Ratings report in March, Srei Equipment Finance had NCDs of ₹3,492.45 crore.

Both CARE Ratings and Acuite had revised their ratings for the Srei companies.

Bank exposure

According to sources, UCO Bank, Punjab National Bank and State Bank of India have among the highest exposure to the two firms.

Also see: Srei Infrastructure Finance Ltd stuck in 5% lower circuit as RBI supersedes co’s Board

However, most banks have been providing for their exposure to the two companies.

Superseding of boards

The RBI had, on October 4, superseded the boards of Srei Infrastructure Finance and Srei Equipment Finance (SEFL), paving the way for their resolution. It also appointed Rajneesh Sharma, Ex- Chief General Manager, Bank of Baroda, as the Administrator of the companies under Section 45-IE (2) of the RBI Act.

On Tuesday, Srei Infrastructure Finance was down 5 per cent to ₹8.17 apiece on the BSE.

Covid impact

Hemant Kanoria, former Chairman of Srei Infrastructure Finance, in the Annual Report, had said that the company was primarily dependent on borrowings from banks and other lenders for deployment of funds towards financing for asset creation. The Covid pandemic has had an adverse effect on its customers, which has affected cash flows, resulting in muted collections, he had said.

The company had also been reducing its infrastructure portfolio and realigning the equipment financing business to the extant regulations, but it was “derailed” to some extent by the pandemic.

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IIFL Finance to raise up to ₹1,000 crore through secured bonds

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IIFL Finance will raise upto ₹1,000 crore through a public issue of secured bonds.

“Fairfax -backed IIFL Finance will issue secured redeemable non-convertible debentures, aggregating to ₹100 crore, with a green-shoe option to retain over-subscription up to ₹900 crore,” it said in a statement on Thursday, adding that the funds will be used business growth and capital augmentation.

“The funds raised will be used to meet credit need of more such customers and accelerate our digital process transformation to enable a frictionless experience,” said Rajesh Rajak, CFO, IIFL Finance.

The public issue opens on September 27 and closes on October 18 with an option of early closure. The allotment will be made on first come first served basis.

Yield offered

The bonds offer up to 8.75 per cent yield for tenor of 60 months. The company will also offer an incentive of 0.25 per cent per annum for existing bond or equity shareholders of the company.

The NCD is available in tenors of 24 months, 36 months and 60 months.

The lead managers to the issue are Edelweiss Financial Services, IIFL Securities and Equirus Capital. The NCDs will be listed on the BSE and the National Stock Exchange.

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Indiabulls Housing Finance to raise up to ₹1,000 cr via NCDs

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Indiabulls Housing Finance (IBHFL) is planning to raise up to ₹1,000 crore via secured and/or unsecured, redeemable, non-convertible debentures (NCDs).

The coupon rate for high net-worth individuals (HNIs/category III investors) and retail (category IV) investors investing in the NCDs ranges from 8.42 per cent to 9.75 per cent, depending on tenor, frequency of interest payment and whether the NCD is secured or unsecured.

In the case of institutional (category I) investors and non-institutional (category II) investors (companies, statutory bodies/corporations/co-operative banks and regional rural banks), the coupon rate ranges from 8.05 per cent to 9.25 per cent.

Base size and minimum application

The base issue size of IBHFL’s NCD issue is ₹200 crore, with an option to retain over-subscription upto ₹800 crore. The issue opens on September 6, 2021 and closes on September 20, 2021.

The minimum application amount is ₹10,000 (10 NCDs). This investment can be made across all 10 series. Investments beyond the minimum application amount can be made in multiples of ₹1,000 (one NCD). The NCDs are proposed to be listed on the NSE and the BSE.

IBHFL said at least 75 per cent of the funds raised through the tranche I issue will be used for the purpose of onward lending, financing, and for repayment of interest and principal of existing borrowings of the company.

The balance is proposed to be utilised for general corporate purposes, subject to such utilisation not exceeding 25 per cent of the amount raised in the tranche I issue, it added.

The unsecured NCDs are in the nature of subordinated debt and will be eligible for tier II capital.

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Axis Bank begins issuing debt securities under ₹35,000 crore-debt raise plan

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Axis Bank on Monday said it has started issuing debt securities under its ₹35,000 crore-debt raise plan announced earlier this year.

In April, the private sector lender had said that its board had approved capital raise proposal up to ₹35,000 crore by issuing various debt instruments in Indian or foreign currency in domestic/overseas markets in one or more tranches.

Shareholder approval

The shareholders of the bank had approved the proposal in the annual general meeting held in July.

“The bank has initiated the process of issuing of the debt instruments, in the form of the additional tier 1 notes (notes) in foreign currency, subject to market conditions,” Axis Bank said in a regulatory filing.

This will be a sustainable bond under the sustainable financing framework of the bank.

The issuance is part of the existing global medium term notes (GMTN) programme of the bank, it said.

The lender said the offering under the GMTN has been informed to Singapore Exchange (SGX) and the International Securities Market (ISM).

“The notes will not be offered or sold in India under the applicable laws,” it added.

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₹8,000 crore quantum tech fund awaits budgetary approval

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The ₹8,000 crore quantum technologies fund may get further delayed as the project is yet to get budgetary approval. Announced by the Union Budget in February 2020, the National Mission on Quantum Technologies and Application (NM-QTA) was expected to be launched this month.

“The current status of the project is that it is under processing for approvals and allocation of budget,” Dr KR Murali Mohan, Scientist-G & Head, Frontier & Futuristic Technologies Division, Department of Science and Technology (DST) said while responding to queries from BusinessLine.

Funding

NM-QTA is seeking to dole out ₹8,000 crore in funding to uplift research and entrepreneurship in the quantum ecosystem. The mission aims to focus on four key areas — quantum communication, quantum simulation, quantum computation, and quantum sensing and meteorology.

NM-QTA was in the process of getting final approvals for this project from several ministries including The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, Defence Research and Development Organisation, Indian Space Research Organisation among others. These approvals seem to be complete.

“In the last few months, several Ministries have also finalised their activities and participation in the Mission including ISRO, DRDO, MeitY, CSIR, etc. This would bring even greater synergies and muscle to the Mission,” Mohan said.

Selection of projects

The detailed project report, outlining the core strategies behind how this budget will be spent, still remains under wraps. However, he said that the mission is a pan-India one and selection of projects and disbursement of the funds would be carried out on merit and competitive basis through open calls with transparent mechanisms.

According to Abhishek Chopra, Founder & CEO of BosonQ Psi, a quantum computing SaaS-based enterprise, funding from the government for burgeoning quantum technologies is necessary.

“At the moment, investor interest in quantum technologies, especially quantum computing is very limited. Quantum technologies are treated as the technology of tomorrow out of science fiction. In this scenario, it becomes hard for start-ups to invest into core R&D and hire immerse tech talent that India has to offer.”

“India has some of the greatest technological minds and has already missed out on key global technological waves ushering in a new era of computing technology. It can be one of the global leaders here and it is important that they capitalise on this now,” he said.

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