The Indian rupee hit a record low of 97 per dollar in late May, pummeled by soaring oil prices due to the US-Iran conflict. Now the currency has recovered about 2% from that low. But the central bank's new swap offer is like a discount coupon for banks that borrow overseas - and ICICI Bank wants to use it first.
The recent volatility in the rupee underscores the broader challenges facing India's economy, which relies heavily on imported oil. A weaker currency increases the cost of imports and fuels inflation, prompting the central bank to attract dollar inflows without drawing down its own reserves. The new swap facility is designed to pull in foreign currency and ease pressure on the rupee.
Why the Bank Is Moving Now
India's second-largest private lender, ICICI Bank, has not sold benchmark dollar bonds since 2017. That gap is about to end. Last month, the RBI introduced a special foreign-exchange swap program that gives banks a cheaper rate on eligible international borrowings.
That means banks can swap the dollars they raise abroad for rupees at a rate below the normal market forward premium. The goal is to encourage banks to bring in global money and prop up the rupee.
ICICI Bank is the first major private-sector lender to jump on this new window. It is in talks to issue bonds under its Global Medium-Term Note program - a debt program that lets companies sell bonds in different currencies and maturities over time. The deal is still being worked out with a group of unnamed global banks.
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The timing matters. The rupee's weakness came from higher oil prices after the US-Iran conflict. Importing energy costs more rupees per dollar. By bringing in dollars through bond sales, the RBI hopes to reduce pressure on the currency without draining its own reserves.
Other Indian Lenders Are Already on the Move
ICICI Bank is not alone. Last month, HDFC Bank raised $750 million through a similar dollar debt sale. That is one and a half times what ICICI Bank is planning now. Recently, State Bank of India, Axis Bank, and Power Finance Corp are among other Indian lenders that have also sold bonds overseas.
The RBI's concessional swap facility, announced last month, allows banks to convert dollars into rupees at a rate below the market forward premium, effectively lowering the cost of borrowing abroad. This incentive is part of a broader strategy to bolster India's foreign exchange reserves and stabilize the rupee, which has been under pressure from global geopolitical tensions and rising import costs.
This wave shows that Indian lenders see a rare chance. The RBI's swap facility makes overseas borrowing cheaper. The rupee's recent 2% gain also suggests that global investors are less worried about further falls.
For ICICI Bank, the $500 million target is the minimum. It could raise more if demand is strong.
What This Means for the Rupee
The RBI's swap facility is designed to encourage banks to bring in dollars without the central bank depleting its own reserves. This mechanism helps stabilize the currency by increasing dollar supply in the domestic market, complementing other measures like direct intervention and interest rate adjustments.
Worth Noting
ICICI Bank is in talks to sell the bonds in the coming weeks. The deal is being arranged by a group of global banks that are in discussions with the lender. How much they end up raising will depend on investor appetite and market conditions. For now, the bank has set a $500 million floor.
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