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Falling rupee, rising hedging costs may sour India Inc’s offshore borrowing plans

Since Donald Trump's election as the next US president, the rupee currency has fallen 2.86 percent against the dollar in less than three months

January 14, 2025 / 13:01 IST
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Rupee

A sharp depreciation in the domestic currency in the past couple of months, which saw the rupee hit a record low of 86.36 against the dollar on January 13, is leading to higher dollar hedging costs for Indian companies, making offshore borrowings an expensive affair, bankers and industry observers have said.

Power transmission project developer Sterlite Grid, which recently raised Rs 2,450 crore to refinance loans of one its biggest projects, opted for domestic sources of funding, as hedging costs made offshore borrowing relatively unattractive.

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“With SOFR (secured overnight financing rate) at around 5 percent and a country risk premium of approximately 2 percent to 2.5 percent, the pricing would have been in the range of 8 percent in dollar terms, give or take 50 basis points.

“Even at 7 percent to 7.5 percent, once you factor in the hedging costs for both the dollar and SOFR, the effective pricing would have been significantly higher,” Raji George, director corporate finance, Sterlite Power, told Moneycontrol last week.