
State Bank of India likely to tap debt market by Aug via tier II issue, sources say
MUMBAI, June 27 (Reuters) - State Bank of India (SBI.NS), opens new tab is likely to kick off a debt fundraising cycle for state-run lenders in this fiscal year over the next couple of months, with a Basel III-compliant tier II bond issue, three sources familiar with the matter told Reuters on Friday.
India's largest lender is looking to raise about 50 billion rupees ($584.59 million) through those bonds, with a 10-year or 15-year maturity in July or August, the sources said.
SBI did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. The sources declined to be named as they are not authorised to speak to the media.
"The initial level talks have already started, but the duration would be finalised looking at the rates at the time of issuance and investors' interest," one of the sources said.
The source further added, SBI could also explore a 15-year structure with a call option at the end of 10 years, like its previous issue.
In September, the bank had raised 75 billion rupees through 15-year tier II bonds, which had a call option at the end of 10 years. In the previous financial year, SBI had raised 150 billion rupees through tier II bonds.
SBI has not tapped the bond market in the first half of 2025 and shelved a plan to issue infrastructure bonds in March due to elevated yields.
No other state-run lender has tapped the debt market in the first quarter of this financial year that started on April 1.
ICICI Bank is the only lender to tap the bond market. It raised 10 billion rupees through 15-year tier II bonds earlier this week, with a call option at the end of 10 years at a 7.45% coupon.
($1 = 85.5300 Indian rupees)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
29 minutes ago
- Reuters
Breakingviews - Richard Li redefines IPO success
HONG KONG, June 26 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Richard Li is nothing if not relentless. The tycoon's pan-Asian insurer FWD is going public after multiple false starts. A $6.2 billion, opens new tab market capitalisation is less than half what Li once targeted. But there are plenty of silver linings. When founder and controlling shareholder Li first tried to list his company in New York in 2021, the group aimed for a valuation of up to $15 billion, sources told Reuters. When that floundered, FWD instead tried for a Hong Kong debut in 2022, but rocky markets thwarted a further two attempts there. FWD's world changed dramatically in the interim. Its closest peers, Asia-focused insurers Prudential (PRU.L), opens new tab and AIA ( opens new tab, have shed around a fifth and a third of their value since 2021 as China's economy stalled, leaving Hong Kong's market in a slump. FWD shifted to steadier growth after an action-packed decade of acquisitions. Its operating profit after tax still outpaces its older, larger rivals, climbing 29% last year to $463 million, while AIA and Pru each managed about 7%. But the value of new business – a measure of estimated future profits from policies sold – rose 14% last year, compared with 28% in 2021. That makes today's $6.2 billion price tag pretty punchy. At HK$38 per share, the pan-Asian insurer is worth 1.1 times its embedded value in 2024 – roughly in the middle of Pru's 0.9 multiple and the 1.4 times sported by AIA. The deal stands out in other ways too. If FWD exercises its overallotment option to hit around $510 million in proceeds, it would be level with Mixue's ( opens new tab $511 million capital raise in February, the city's largest IPO so far this year. True, it's far below the $3 billion targeted in New York. However, Li was able to drum up some $1.8 billion through pre-IPO private funding rounds in 2021 and 2022, making up some of the difference. And in some respects the IPO is testing the waters: the company is only selling a small slug of stock – less than 10% – and no existing shareholders are cashing out. That means Li and fellow owners can still hold out hope that public markets may at some point bump up FWD's value. For now, a successful deal is being redefined as one that can get done at all. Follow Katrina Hamlin on Bluesky, opens new tab and Linkedin, opens new tab.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
India posts first current account surplus in four quarters, central bank says
MUMBAI, June 27 (Reuters) - India's current account posted a surplus for the first time in four quarters in the January-March period, helped by higher services exports, the central bank said on Friday. The current account surplus (INCURA=ECI), opens new tab stood at $13.5 billion, or 1.3% of GDP (INCAPA=ECI), opens new tab in the fourth quarter of the fiscal year 2024-2025 versus the polled estimate of $8.5 billion, or 0.9% of GDP. The surplus compares with a deficit of $11.3 billion or 1.1% of GDP in the preceding quarter, the Reserve Bank of India said in a statement. The current account had registered a surplus of $4.6 billion or 0.5% of GDP in the same quarter a year ago. For the full fiscal year 2024-25, the current account deficit stood at $23.3 billion, or 0.6% of GDP, against $26 billion, or 0.7% of GDP in the previous year, on the back of higher net invisible receipts. "Apart from persistent strength in services exports, spike in remittances this year to a record high $123 billion was a key driver," said Kanika Pasricha, chief economic adviser at Union Bank of India. Pasricha expects full-year current account to log a deficit of 1.2% of GDP amid global trade tensions, with trade deals being "on a close watch." India's net services receipts increased to $53.3 billion in the fiscal fourth quarter from $42.7 billion a year earlier, contributing to the surplus, the RBI said. "Services exports have risen on a year-on-year basis in major categories such as business services and computer services," the central bank said. Personal transfer receipts, which are mainly remittances by Indians employed overseas, increased to $33.9 billion from $31.3 billion a year ago. Meanwhile, the merchandise trade deficit (INTRDQ=ECI), opens new tab widened to $59.5 billion, from $52 billion a year earlier, the RBI said. The country's balance of payments (INBOP=ECI), opens new tab was at a surplus of $8.8 billion in the March quarter, compared with a surplus of $30.8 billion a year earlier. The balance of payments recorded a deficit of $5 billion for 2024-25, compared with a surplus of $63.7 billion in the previous year. "With the current account deficit at modest levels, the swing factor for balance of payments will be the strength of financial flows, particularly portfolio and net FDI inflows, after a weak patch last year," said Radhika Rao, executive director and senior economist at DBS Bank.


Reuters
2 hours ago
- Reuters
HDB Financial's IPO gets $19 billion in bids as institutional buyers pile in
June 27 (Reuters) - HDB Financial Services' $1.5 billion IPO drew bids worth $19 billion by Friday's close as institutional buyers rushed for India's largest offering so far this year, signaling investor confidence in a stock market recovery. India's IPO market is gaining momentum after a slow start, as the stock market stabilizes following earlier volatility driven by global trade concerns. The blue-chip Nifty 50 index (.NSEI), opens new tab, which hit a one-year low in April, now sits just 2.4% below record highs from last year, as easing geopolitical tensions and trade fears spurred risk-on sentiment. HDB Financial, a unit of India's biggest private lender HDFC Bank ( opens new tab, saw its issue subscribed 16.7 times over, driven by qualified institutional buyers such as foreign investors and mutual funds who bid for 55 times their reserved portion. Non-institutional investors bid for 10 times their portion, while retail investor interest was comparatively muted, with their shares being oversubscribed just 1.4 times, exchange data showed. The strong investor response makes HDB Financial's IPO the most subscribed offering over $1 billion since Zomato's in 2021, data from Prime Database showed. "The response to the issue has been very encouraging, and considering the issue size signals that investors are growing increasingly confident of the local market as global trade worries ebb out," said Narendra Solanki, head of research at Anand Rathi Shares and Stock Brokers. "The bid numbers show that the primary markets are coming back to life after a lull earlier this year, and such a response for a sizeable issue like HDB's should give IPO hopefuls in the pipeline confidence to also come forth to test waters," Solanki added. HDB Financial' s IPO, the biggest ever by an Indian non-bank lender, was one of six offerings this week, five of which were oversubscribed in a range of 2-86 times. Earlier this week, Credila Financial Services and Pine Labs filed for IPOs. HDFC Bank, which holds a 94% stake in HDB, sold shares worth up to 100 billion rupees, while HDB issued new shares worth 25 billion rupees. The company is targeting a valuation of up to $7.1 billion at the upper end of the 700-740 rupees price band. The stock is expected to start trading on July 2. HDB had already raised $392 million from anchor investors, including BlackRock funds, Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) ( opens new tab and Norway's sovereign wealth fund.