HomeNewsBusinessMarketsBorrowing cost for housing finance cos, NBFCs rose 82 bps & 83 bps during liquidity crisis: Study

Borrowing cost for housing finance cos, NBFCs rose 82 bps & 83 bps during liquidity crisis: Study

CPs are unsecured money market instruments issued by corporates to raise short-term funds and are usually for a period up to one year

February 19, 2019 / 16:34 IST
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Ophelio Roel Almeida Moneycontrol News

The cost of borrowing for housing finance companies (HFCs) via commercial paper (CPs) surged 82 basis points (100 bps=1 percentage point) from April last year to January this year, CARE Ratings said in a study. The same for liquidity stressed non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) rose 64 bps over the same period.

CPs are unsecured money market instruments issued by corporates to raise short-term funds and are usually for a period up to one year. NBFCs and HFCs are key borrowers of these funds, accounting for almost 55 percent of all fresh CP issuances on a monthly basis.

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In contrast, the marginal cost of lending rate (MCLR) of banks increased only 46 bps, nearly in line with the 50 basis repo rate rise seen over this period. The yield on 10-year government bonds actually declined by 16 bps from April last year to 7.35 percent in January.

At the peak (September-November 2018) of the liquidity crisis, emanating from the defaults by Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services (IL&FS), the cost of borrowing for HFC and NBFCs rose 56 bps and 83 bps to 8.21 percent and 8.51 percent in November, respectively.

Cost of borrowings for CPs, bank interest rates and G-Sec yields