HomeNewsBusinessStates' borrowing becomes cheaper by 12 bps in one month amid positive domestic cues

States' borrowing becomes cheaper by 12 bps in one month amid positive domestic cues

As per RBI’s data, between June 11 and July 9, states have borrowed Rs 52,513.88 crore through SDLs, which was 70 percent of the total Rs 74,950 crore indicated in the calendar.

July 10, 2024 / 15:51 IST
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Bonds
Bonds

Borrowing by states became cheaper by 12 basis points (bps) in the last one month, according to Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data. This is because of the lower borrowing by states than indicated in calendar through State Development Loans (SDL), easing the yield on the government securities and demand from the state-owned banks, money market experts said.

The yield on 10-year SDLs stood at 7.32 percent in the primary market on July 9, compared to 7.44 percent on June 4. Similarly, other tenure papers also saw some yield moderation of 5-7 bps.

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SDLs are issued by state governments and the auctions facilitated by the RBI. Usually, the Employees' Provident Fund Organisation and other pension funds, banks, some mutual funds, and other long-term investors invest in these securities.

“Consistent lower SDL supply and reducing benchmark yield are contributing to lower cost of borrowing for states,” said Mataprasad Pandey, vice president, Arete Capital Service.