HDFC Bank, the country's largest lender by market value and the biggest Nifty constituent by weight, has doubled its overseas borrowing through a term loan syndication from a clutch of 23 global banks in a greenshoe option to the primary facility, having initially borrowed $500 million from Japan's largest lender MUFG in December.
HDFC Bank, which merged its mortgage lending parent into itself last year, chose to exercise the green shoe option to raise another $500 million, taking the total proceeds to $1 billion in what is the largest three-year overseas loan organised by an Indian bank.
«The syndication was completed on Thursday and the full green shoe option was exercised by HDFC Bank due to the strong demand from foreign banks,» said a person aware of the deal. «Banks from Asia, the Middle East and Europe participated in this syndication, which is the largest three-year syndication by an Indian bank for general corporate purposes.»
HDFC Bank had raised $500 million from MUFG Bank in December. The money raised would be used by India's most-valued lender to shore up its liabilities after acquiring parent HDFC last year.
The loan was priced at 110 basis points above the three month Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), which was trading at around 5.35% in December 2023, meaning HDFC Bank paid about 6.45% for the three-year loan. One basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
MUFG was the sole bank mandated with the loan that was financed through the Japanese lender's Gift City branch.
«At the syndication stage,