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India's Adani Green calls off planned dollar bond sale, sources say

India's Adani Green Energy cancelled its plan to raise funds through U.S. dollardenominated bonds after financiers positioned quotes at greater yields than the business wanted to pay, 2 bankers directly associated with the deal stated late on Tuesday.

The initial assistance set out to offer a yield of 7% for the 20-year maturity, according to one of the lenders.

Some financiers were demanding a greater yield, with which the business was not comfortable and hence they chose to call off the offer, the banker said.

Adani Green Energy did not react to an email sent out by Reuters outside regular India service hours.

Financiers were seeking greater yields due to broader market unpredictability associated to the U.S. governmental elections and domestic political dangers which could affect the bond issuers' repayment ability, the second banker stated.

The lenders declined to be recognized as they were not authorised to talk to the media.

The Adani Group went back to the dollar bond market earlier in 2024, about a year after it was implicated by short-seller Hindenburg Research Study in January 2023 of inappropriate use of overseas tax havens and stock manipulation that triggered a $150 billion rout in shares of the group's business.

In March, Adani Green Energy raised $409 million by means of 18-year bonds after getting bids of almost $3 billion.

The current bond issue was led by Adani Green systems - Adani Hybrid Energy Jaisalmer One, Adani Hybrid Energy Jaisalmer 2, Adani Hybrid Energy Jaisalmer Four and Adani Solar Power Jaisalmer One - through a structured bond deal.

Emails sent to the 4 subsidiaries outside routine business hours were not right away answered.

Each system was expected to ensure the obligations of the others, while covenants attached to the bond issue will be set on an aggregate basis, according to a note by Fitch Rankings.

Covenants are terms connected to the bond, typically financial metrics the company need to maintain to maintain the borrowing at the concurred interest rate.

The proceeds would have been used to re-finance the subsidiaries' existing dollar-denominated building loans, Fitch Rankings has said.

(source: Reuters)