investors turned net purchasers of Indian corporate debt after a gap of seven months, primarily due to a high-yielding Shapoorji Pallonji entity bond issue that drew firm overseas interest. As on June 30, foreign portfolio investment in corporate bonds was at ₹1,04,676 crore, an increase of ₹6,094 crore from May 31, NSDL data showed. June marked the first month since October 2022 in which overseas investors made a net purchase of Indian corporate debt.
«In the month of June, there was a large, structured finance transaction which was the offering from the Shapoorji Pallonji group company Goswami Infratech. A lot of foreign investors participated strongly because irrespective of the BBB credit rating, they found the structure comfortable and the risk-reward attractive,» said Ajay Manglunia, head-investment grade group at JM Financial. Foreign investment in debt issuances of Indian firms has dropped over the last year as rapid rate hikes in the US have eaten into returns from domestic bonds.
As on March 2, 2022, FPI investment in corporate bonds was at ₹1,19,029 crore. It was in that month that the US Federal Reserve embarked on its most aggressive tightening cycle in decades to battle elevated inflation. With the US central bank indicating fresh tightening, the appetite of foreign players for Indian corporate bonds would largely be restricted to high-yielding issuances from the structured finance space, market participants said.
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