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Bankers claim that the bond sales by three Indian state-owned firms prompted by the yield decline accounted for $880 million of the total amount.

Bankers claim that the bond sales by three Indian state-owned firms prompted by the yield decline accounted for $880 million of the total amount.

Three merchant bankers familiar with the matter on Friday said that a decline in corporate bond rates in secondary market following a dovish policy encouraged three state-run companies to raise approximately 77.50 trillion rupees ($880.5 millions) through bonds sales.

Hindustan Petroleum, a state-run company, plans to raise 50 billion rupees. Bharat Petroleum plans to raise 20 billion rupees.

The bankers said that both oil marketing companies will be looking to issue bonds with a maturity of five years or less in the next few days.

North Eastern Electric Power Corp. (NEEPCO), a subsidiary wholly owned by NTPC, would like to raise approximately 7.50 billion rupees via bonds maturing between five and eight years.

BPCL tapped into the market about six months ago. NEEPCO raised money via debt in May 2024, and BPCL did so in March 2023.

One of the bankers stated that "NEEPCO was waiting for the central banking policy for a very long time and should be first to go out among the three."

The companies did not respond to the emails asking for a response, and bankers asked to remain anonymous as they were not authorized to speak with media.

The Reserve Bank of India maintained the status quo in its policy rate setting and said that lower inflation had opened policy space for growth.

The expectation of a reading of record low in October and the drop in retail inflation down to an eight-month low have cemented bets on a rate cut in December.

According to LSEG data, the bond markets are rallying and AAA-rated corporate bonds with shorter maturities have seen yields decline by 6-10 basis point.

Bankers said that corporate bond issuances have slowed in September but will pick up again this month as the easing of yields is expected to encourage both issuers and investor. ($1 = 88.0190 Indian rupees). (Reporting and editing by Sumana Niandy; Khushi malhotra, Dharamraj Dhutia)

(source: Reuters)