Punjab National Bank’s board approves raising ₹6,000 crore

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Punjab National Bank (PNB) on Friday said its board has approved raising up to ₹6,000 crore by issuing bonds.

The decision was taken at the meeting of the board of directors on Friday.

In a regulatory filing, the bank said its board has “approved raising of capital through issue of Basel III additional Tier-1 (AT-1) bonds or Tier II bonds or a combination of both in one or more tranches up to an amount of ₹6,000 crore”.

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HDFC Bank approves issue of AT1 bonds

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HDFC Bank on Monday said it will issue debt instruments in the form of Additional Tier 1 bonds.

“We had informed the stock exchanges that the Board of Directors of HDFC Bank in its meeting held on July 17, 2021, is contemplating raising of long term funds through the issuance of $ Basel III Compliant Additional Tier 1 Bonds (Notes), in the international markets, subject to market conditions,” it said in its filing.

An offering memorandum has been prepared and shall be made available to the prospective investors in relation to the contemplated issue of Notes, it further said.

The bank, however, did not specify the amount to be raised.

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Meanwhile, Moody’s Investors Service in a statement said it has assigned a Ba3 (hyb) rating to HDFC Bank’s proposed USD-denominated, undated, non-cumulative and subordinated AT 1 capital securities.

“The Ba3 (hyb) rating is three notches below HDFC Bank’s baa3 Baseline Credit Assessment (BCA) and Adjusted BCA, reflecting the probability of impairment associated with non-cumulative coupon suspension, as well as the likelihood of high loss severity when the bank reaches the point of non-viability,” it said.

In its meeting on July 17, the bank’s board had approved the issue of standalone foreign currency denominated Perpetual Debt Instruments as Basel III compliant AT 1 bonds to foreign (global) investors outside India, on an unsecured basis, on a public or a private placement basis, along with a proposed listing of the AT1 Bonds and other related activities in the course of the financial year 2021- 22, subject to market conditions and applicable approvals.

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RBI pays higher-than-expected price to buy 10-year G-Sec

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The Reserve Bank of India paid about 38 paise more to purchase the 10-year Government Security (G-Sec) under the third tranche of the G-Sec Acquisition Programme 1.0 in a bid to keep bond yields on a tight leash.

The central bank bought this G-Sec (coupon rate: 5.85 per cent) at ₹98.99 (yield: 5.991 per cent) against the previous close of ₹98.6075 (6.045 per cent).

The move to buy the aforementioned security at a higher price had the desired effect as it closed about 18 paise higher at ₹98.79 than the previous close, with the yield declining about 3 basis points to 6.0192 per cent.

Bond yield and price are inversely related and move in opposite directions.

Under G-SAP 1.0, the central has committed upfront to a specific amount (₹1-lakh crore in the first quarter of FY22) of open market purchases of G-Secs to enable a stable and orderly evolution of the yield curve amidst comfortable liquidity conditions.

Of the six G-Secs and State development loans of 12 States the central bank intended to buy aggregating ₹40,000 crore, it invested about 67 per cent of the amount (or ₹26,779 crore) in buying the 10-year paper.

Marzban Irani, CIO-Fixed Income, LIC Mutual Fund, said: “the 10-year G-Sec is the most widely-traded security. It is the signalling rate. Most of the borrowing is in the belly (10-year to 15-year) of the curve.

“In the last two days, prices had fallen based on the upcoming Fed event and profit booking. So probably it was bought 38 paise up.”

He underscored that most of the float is with RBI in 10-year benchmark paper.

“Probably RBI gave an exit to investors holding this paper so that those they can participate in auctions going ahead and support the borrowing,” Irani said.

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PFC raises $500 million through bonds issue

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Power Finance Corporation (PFC) has raised $500 million (₹3,650 crore) through the issuance of dollar-denominated bonds under Reg-S route of the US Securities Act on January 29. The bonds have a fixed maturity of May 16, 2031, making them the longest tenor issue from India this year.

The notes were priced on January 21, and the issue was oversubscribed by 5.1 times, with the order book amounting to around $2.55 billion, PFC said in a statement. The bonds have a fixed coupon of 3.35 per cent per annum. They will be listed on the Singapore Exchange Securities Trading Limited, NSE IFSC and India INX.

“The proceeds from bonds will be utilized in accordance with the external commercial borrowing regulations of the Reserve Bank of India including for on-lending to power sector utilities,” PFC said. The union budget has provided an outlay for a ₹3.06 lakh crore financial assistance scheme to utilities.

This issue by PFC is separate from the ₹10,000 crore that the power sector NBFC is raising through its maiden bond issue of taxable non-convertible debentures, the first tranche of which, for ₹5,000 crore, was opened on January 15 and closed on January 29, according to the company’s prospectus.

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