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BRICS bank looks to tap into Indian Rupee offshore market

NDB looks to tap into Indian Rupee offshore market. It is the safest of investment ratings. If you are a AAA issuer, essentially it means that there's almost zero probability of you ever defaulting.

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Published : Aug 22, 2019, 7:11 PM IST

Beijing: The New Development Bank (NDB) of the BRICS countries, which got its first 'AAA' rating this week, plans to tap into the Indian Rupee offshore market as part of its efforts to raise capital, according to a top bank official.

The Shanghai-based NDB - floated by Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) - is headed by renowned Indian banker K V Kamath.

Japan Credit Rating Agency Ltd (JCR) on Tuesday assigned 'AAA' foreign currency long-term issuer rating with a stable outlook to NDB, the first such rating acquired by the Bank since it started functioning four years ago.

"It is the safest of investment ratings. If you are a AAA issuer, essentially it means that there's almost zero probability of you ever defaulting. That's what the rating agencies effectively telling investors out there," NBD Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Leslie Maasdorp told PTI in an interview.

Maasdorp said it is significant that the NDB got a higher rating than the BRICS countries.

"India, for example, is BBB- on investment grade, South Africa has one rating at investment grade, China is A+, Brazil is sub-investment grade and Russia is BBB+. So, basically, what we have now, is that the NDB is rated significantly higher than a weighted average of our members," he said.

"And it is a significant achievement because there is no other bank that we are aware of in the world that is only owned by emerging markets that has a rating as high as ours. All of the others that have such a high rating, they have either the United States or in Japan or the European Union as members. We have no AAA-rated countries as members," he said.

Maasdorp said the bank is looking into the Indian Rupee offshore market to raise resources after Masala bonds market slowed down.
Kamath, who is the President of the Bank, "knows the Indian market extremely well, we looked very closely at Masala bonds market", he said.

"We definitely intend to tap into the Indian Rupee offshore market. We looked at this already in 2017. But then, in 2018, there's been a significant drop in the market liquidity and demand for Masala bond," he said.

Read More: Start-ups with turnover up to Rs 25 crore to get promised tax holiday: CBDT

"For a number of reasons the Masala bond market kind of slowed down. We remain very keen to access offshore Rupee (market) as part of our capital raising, but we don't have timing yet. We are studying market conditions closely, because, obviously, investors are very sensitive to interest rate environment," he said.

"I anticipate that in 2020 we are likely to raise Indian Rupees, but it will be based on the demand for local currency. Many of our loans in India to date have been in USD, whereas in other countries there's been more demand for local currency," he said.

"So, we are likely to also look for hard currencies for 2020, but it's all based on what happens to the interest rate environment," he said.
Maasdorp said a total of 37 projects have been approved for all the five BRICS counties.

"India is number two in terms of approvals now -- I'd say about 29 per cent of our entire approved loans (totalling USD 10.2 billion), almost a third of that is in India," he said.

China stands first with 38 per cent of approvals.

According to the bank, the approved projects for India included Assam Bridge (USD 300 million), Mumbai Metro Rail (USD 260 million), Madhya Pradesh roads project (USD 350 million), Madhya Pradesh Bridges project (USD 175 million), Bihar rural roads project (USD 350 million), Rajasthan Water project (USD 345 million) and Madhya Pradesh water supply project (USD 470 million).

Asked whether there is any competition between the NDB and the China sponsored Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) which is also based in China, Maasdorp said multilateral banks don't compete with each other.

"In general, we do not compete with each other, we are co-financing in many instances," he said.

"We work very closely with AIIB because they are a sister institution, we are both headquartered in China. And the third reason why we don't really compete is that we provide a lot of local currency financing and we are unique in that regard," he said.

About the slowdown of the BRICS economies including China and India, he said, "it's obviously concerning that the global economy is going through this global slowdown, but in all our member countries there's strong urbanization that is driving growth, for example in India."

"India requires bridges, roads, airports -- all these things to fuel the economic growth of the country…we believe that a multilateral development bank should do what we call counter-cyclical investment, meaning when the cycle is down, when economies are slowing down, you need to invest in infrastructure to help kick start the economies," he added.

Beijing: The New Development Bank (NDB) of the BRICS countries, which got its first 'AAA' rating this week, plans to tap into the Indian Rupee offshore market as part of its efforts to raise capital, according to a top bank official.

The Shanghai-based NDB - floated by Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) - is headed by renowned Indian banker K V Kamath.

Japan Credit Rating Agency Ltd (JCR) on Tuesday assigned 'AAA' foreign currency long-term issuer rating with a stable outlook to NDB, the first such rating acquired by the Bank since it started functioning four years ago.

"It is the safest of investment ratings. If you are a AAA issuer, essentially it means that there's almost zero probability of you ever defaulting. That's what the rating agencies effectively telling investors out there," NBD Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Leslie Maasdorp told PTI in an interview.

Maasdorp said it is significant that the NDB got a higher rating than the BRICS countries.

"India, for example, is BBB- on investment grade, South Africa has one rating at investment grade, China is A+, Brazil is sub-investment grade and Russia is BBB+. So, basically, what we have now, is that the NDB is rated significantly higher than a weighted average of our members," he said.

"And it is a significant achievement because there is no other bank that we are aware of in the world that is only owned by emerging markets that has a rating as high as ours. All of the others that have such a high rating, they have either the United States or in Japan or the European Union as members. We have no AAA-rated countries as members," he said.

Maasdorp said the bank is looking into the Indian Rupee offshore market to raise resources after Masala bonds market slowed down.
Kamath, who is the President of the Bank, "knows the Indian market extremely well, we looked very closely at Masala bonds market", he said.

"We definitely intend to tap into the Indian Rupee offshore market. We looked at this already in 2017. But then, in 2018, there's been a significant drop in the market liquidity and demand for Masala bond," he said.

Read More: Start-ups with turnover up to Rs 25 crore to get promised tax holiday: CBDT

"For a number of reasons the Masala bond market kind of slowed down. We remain very keen to access offshore Rupee (market) as part of our capital raising, but we don't have timing yet. We are studying market conditions closely, because, obviously, investors are very sensitive to interest rate environment," he said.

"I anticipate that in 2020 we are likely to raise Indian Rupees, but it will be based on the demand for local currency. Many of our loans in India to date have been in USD, whereas in other countries there's been more demand for local currency," he said.

"So, we are likely to also look for hard currencies for 2020, but it's all based on what happens to the interest rate environment," he said.
Maasdorp said a total of 37 projects have been approved for all the five BRICS counties.

"India is number two in terms of approvals now -- I'd say about 29 per cent of our entire approved loans (totalling USD 10.2 billion), almost a third of that is in India," he said.

China stands first with 38 per cent of approvals.

According to the bank, the approved projects for India included Assam Bridge (USD 300 million), Mumbai Metro Rail (USD 260 million), Madhya Pradesh roads project (USD 350 million), Madhya Pradesh Bridges project (USD 175 million), Bihar rural roads project (USD 350 million), Rajasthan Water project (USD 345 million) and Madhya Pradesh water supply project (USD 470 million).

Asked whether there is any competition between the NDB and the China sponsored Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) which is also based in China, Maasdorp said multilateral banks don't compete with each other.

"In general, we do not compete with each other, we are co-financing in many instances," he said.

"We work very closely with AIIB because they are a sister institution, we are both headquartered in China. And the third reason why we don't really compete is that we provide a lot of local currency financing and we are unique in that regard," he said.

About the slowdown of the BRICS economies including China and India, he said, "it's obviously concerning that the global economy is going through this global slowdown, but in all our member countries there's strong urbanization that is driving growth, for example in India."

"India requires bridges, roads, airports -- all these things to fuel the economic growth of the country…we believe that a multilateral development bank should do what we call counter-cyclical investment, meaning when the cycle is down, when economies are slowing down, you need to invest in infrastructure to help kick start the economies," he added.

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Gadkari         eyes Rs 10L-cr revenue from e-comm project in 2-3 yrs
         Mumbai, Aug 22 (PTI) Union minister Nitin Gadkari on
Thursday said the government's plan to launch Bharatcraft
portal, an e-commerce marketing platform, has the potential to
achieve revenues of around Rs 10 lakh crore in the 2-3 years.
         "The Bharatcraft portal, which will be on the lines of
Alibaba and Amazon, will provide a platform for MSMEs to
market and sell their products and in turn boost the sector,"
Gadkari said.
         Speaking at 200th listing of an MSME company 'Wonder
Fibromats' on NSE EMERGE, Gadkari said, "We want to give a
boost to the MSME sector which is currently contributing
nearly 29 per cent to the manufacturing segment and 40 per
cent to the exports."
         The MSME sector has the potential to generate
additional employment of 5 crore in the next five years. The
government has set a target to increase the contribution of
MSMEs in the manufacturing sector to 50 per cent in the next
five years, he added.
         Gadkari further said that payments have always been
the issue for the MSMEs as the Government and public sectors
delay their payments.
         "A committee has been set up to study this aspect and
we expect the report in the next few days. The government is
planning to enable legislation framework, which would help the
MSME sector get their payments faster, within 45 days of the
bills being due. Any further delay in payments would lead to
legal implications," the minister said.
         He said the government will encourage MSMEs to
contribute more towards exports, how they could contribute to
overall economic growth and also enhance employment potential.
         There was a need for the MSMEs to come in the
mainstream and take advantage of the NSE platform for raising
funds.
         "At a time when we have nearly 6 crore MSMEs in the
country, we have only 200 listings on such a platform. There
are MSMEs who have larger exposure to exports. I want such
companies to come forward and use this instrument. This will
boost the sector," Gadkari said, adding that if small
investors start investing in such platform, it will open a new
gateway for development.
         "Attaining finance from banks is difficult. Government
acknowledges the efforts and initiatives taken by NSE to
empower these small businesses and launch MSME-specific equity
trading platform to enable them to raise capital. This can be
an opportunity for MSMEs," he added.
         Speaking at the event, NSE managing director and CEO
Vikram Limaye said, "NSE has always been at the forefront of
strengthening and supporting small and medium enterprises.
We believe the SMEs are crucial not only for economic growth,
but also for employment and inclusive growth."
         The event also witnessed the migration of two SME
companies Madhya Bharat Agro Products and Krishana Phoschem to
the mainboard of NSE. The listed SMEs on NSE are from 16
states.
         NSE EMERGE now has 200 companies listed on its SME
platform, raising upwards of Rs 3,100 crore over a period of
last seven years since its inception in 2012.
         The market capitalization of these listed small and
medium enterprises is in the region of Rs 8,800 crore, and 22
SMEs have over time migrated to the main board of NSE. PTI PSK
AP
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