LIC Housing plans to raise up to Rs 1,000 cr via ECBs

LIC Housing Finance Limited, promoted by state-run insurance giant LIC, is mulling raising Rs 700-1,000 crore through External Commercial Borrowings (ECB), said Chief Executive V K Sharma.

Last month, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) allowed real estate developers and housing finance companies to raise up to $1 billion through external commercial borrowings (ECBs) in the current fiscal to promote low-cost housing projects.

Sharma said a committee comprising senior officials of the company has been formed, which is in touch with the apex bank on the ECB issue.

"We expect that we will be in that segment which has been permitted by the RBI. We expect that we will be raising somewhere around Rs 700-1,000 crore. We will apply for that," Sharma said on the sidelines of a two-day property exhibition here.

ECBs are considered attractive as cost of raising the loan overseas is lower than that of domestic borrowings. Besides, they provide an additional avenue to access large amount of funds from global financial markets.

To a query on when the company would raise ECBs, Sharma said: "I cannot comment on that. Board resolution is there in place. We have created a committee at company level and they are in touch with RBI."

He said LIC Housing Finance Limited (LICHFL) is expected to complete the institutional placement offer by fiscal end.

The QIP (Qualified Institutional Placement) was delayed due to variety of reasons, including volatility in the markets, he added.

Though he did not mention the exact amount being raised through QIP, a senior official earlier told PTI it is hoping to raise up to Rs 1,200 crore through the proposed issue of new shares.

LIC, which is promoter of LICHFL, currently holds 40.31% stake in the company. While institutional investors, both foreign and domestic together, are holding 41.47% shares, others hold 18.22% shares.

The merchant bankers appointed for the issue include Nomura, Kotak Securities, HSBC, Citigroup and Avendus Securities, according to the official said.

Parent LIC's stake in the company currently stands at 40.31%, which will come down to the 36.54% level after the issue.

LICHFL, which is now charging 10.25% interest on home loans, will wait for Reserve Bank of India's policy review slated for January 29 before taking a decision on revising interest rates, Sharma said.

Last year, the company disbursed Rs 20,000 crore loans and is targeting Rs 25,000 crore this year, he added.

Post new comment

E-mail ID will not be published
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.

FC NEWSLETTER

Stay informed on our latest news!

EDITORIAL OF THE DAY

  • CCI’s landmark Rs 6,300 crore fine against cement firms is right in spirit

    On the face of it, last Friday’s ruling by the Competition Apellate Tribunal (Compat), the appellate body for cases before the Competition Commissio

INTERVIEWS

GV Nageswara Rao

MD & CEO, IDBI Federal Life

Timothy Moe

Goldman Sachs

Chander Mohan Sethi

CMD, Reckitt Benckiser India

COLUMNIST

Urs Schöttli

Why Malaysia needs change

A few days ago, Malaysia’s ruling coalition claimed another ...

Parvez Imam

How we are being timed to perfection

Are we timed to perfection yet? Precision of time is ...

Bubbles Sabharwal

Talk things out, laugh together, live together

This article is prompted by my friend Neerja’s e-mail which ...