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Debt sales are delayed to the next quarter due to higher corporate bond yields

Merchant bankers and investors said that the high yields on corporate bonds and the cancellation of four planned issues in three weeks has led some issuers?to delay the big-ticket fundraising until the next quarter.

Companies, including Micro Units Development and Refinance Agency and Indian Bank as well as ONGC Petro Additions, have delayed debt sales of 150 billion rupees (1.68 billion dollars) that were originally scheduled for the December-January quarter.

Non-banking finance companies have also chosen the wait until the next quarter before tapping the market.

The yields on AAA-rated bonds for corporates have risen by 20-30 basis point this month.

Investors are demanding higher yields from AAA-rated companies due to tight systemic liquidity and elevated government bond yields.

Power Finance Corp has cancelled two planned bond sales in the past three weeks. Indian Railway Finance Corp, and SIDBI also canceled their bonds because investors wanted higher returns.

The three companies canceled bond sales totaling 225 billion rupees, with maturities ranging from short to long-term.

Vinay Pai is the head of Equirus Capital's fixed income. He said: "Global uncertainty, tight liquidity in India, rupee volatility, and outflows of foreign capital have made investors more cautious. This has led to higher yields than market expectations following RBI policy."

SILVER LINING LIQUID

The recent central bank liquidity push may have a positive impact on corporate bond yields - if not right away, then at least in January and March.

Equirus Capital's Pai said that the RBI liquidity injection should help stabilize yields, restore investor confidence, and support corporate issuers. Reporting by Dharamraj Dhutia, Editing by Ronojoy Mazumdar.

(source: Reuters)