India’s IIFCL plans $1 billion loan; in talks for $400 million ADB funding

State-run IIFCL eyes a $1 billion loan alongside an additional $400 million in ADB funding to boost domestic infrastructure financing.

MUMBAI, June 29 (Reuters) – IIFCL (India Infrastructure Finance Company) is planning to borrow $1 billion from overseas investors, which could be its ​biggest foreign-currency loan, while also exploring a separate $400 million ‌funding from the Asian Development Bank, an executive said.

The Indian company is the latest to tap into the foreign lending market after the ​Reserve Bank of India introduced a series of measures to ​boost dollar inflows and support the rupee. The measures ⁠include allowing state-run firms and banks to raise foreign currency ​funds to hedge their forex exposure at a subsidised rate.

The $1 billion ​loan will be for 15 years at an interest rate of under 7%, and the company is talking to the Asian Development Bank for ​a separate 20-year loan of roughly $400 million, Palash Srivastava, IIFCL ​deputy managing director, told Reuters on Monday.

IIFL doubled the 15-year loan’s size ‌to $1 ⁠billion from an initial $500 million after the RBI’s incentive, he added.

Reuters has previously reported that three Indian development finance institutions plan to raise at least $1.5 billion through foreign-currency bank loans under the ​RBI facility.

Further, IIFCL ​is weighing a ⁠debut dollar bond of around $100 million by year-end, Srivastava said.

“The bond will likely be in ​the three- to five-year tenor,” he added.

Dollar borrowings ​have picked ⁠up following the opening of the RBI’s subsidised borrowing window.

HDFC Bank raised $750 million via a five-year bond, while Axis Bank priced $800 million through ⁠a dual-tranche ​dollar bond sale. State-run Power Finance ​Corp raised $300 million via dollar bonds.

State Bank of India and Bank of Baroda ​are also planning overseas fundraising.