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Bankers claim that Vedanta will issue multiple-tenor bonds in the next few days.

Three merchant bankers on Friday said that Vedanta, India's largest company, plans to raise $271 million through the sale bonds with maturities of two years or 30 months.

They said that the company would pay a coupon rate of 9.40% or 9.50% on these bonds and had invited commitment bids on Tuesday.

The company intends to raise 20 billion rupees via two-year bonds. These bonds will include a greenshoe feature that allows the company to retain up to an additional 5 billion.

The aim is to raise 3.50 billion rupees via 30-month bonds with an option for a greenshoe of 6.50bn rupees.

The bankers said that the total fundraising would be limited to 30 billion rupees.

Anchor investors of the bonds are ICICI Prudential Mutual Funds, Nippon India Mutual Funds, Axis Asset Managements, Aditya Birla Sun Life Mutual Funds, and Kotak Mahindra Mutual Funds.

The anchor investors are Nippon India Mutual Fund, Kotak Mahindra Mutual Fund.

Vedanta didn't immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

The company raised 10 billion rupees in July through bonds with a 15-month term and a coupon tied to the overnight index swap rate for one month. $1 = 86,7180 Indian Rupees (Reporting and editing by Savio D’Souza; Dharamraj Dhutia)

(source: Reuters)