Mortgage lender will use part of capital to fund inorganic
opportunities and investments in existing group businesses.
Housing
Development Finance Corporation’s (HDFC’s) Qualified Institutional Placement
(QIP) for equity shares opened for subscription on Wednesday with a floor price
of Rs 1,838.94 per share. It is looking to raise Rs 14,000 crore of equity
capital.
HDFC might offer a five per cent discount on the floor price. Its share closed
almost flat at Rs 1,776.9 per share on the benchmark BSE Sensex.
The mortgage
lender is also looking to raise Rs 9,000 crore through secured non-convertible
debentures.
The company will
use part of fresh capital for funding inorganic opportunities and investments
in existing group businesses. It is also looking at setting up a real estate
fund in collaboration with other investors to finance stressed projects.
The fund raising
by HDFC comes within a day of Axis Bank launching its QIP to raise around Rs
10, 000 crore. The floor price set by the bank is Rs 442.19 per share.
According to the terms of the deal, the base deal size is up to Rs 8,000 crore,
with an option to upsize an additional Rs 2,000 crore.
HDFC’s capital
adequacy ratio (CAR) was 17.6 per cent, of which tier-I capital was 16.5 per
cent and tier-II capital was 1.1 per cent, in financial year 2019-20 (FY20).
The investment in HDFC Bank has been considered as a deduction in the
computation of tier-I capital.
During the year,
the National
Housing Bank amended the capital adequacy requirements for housing finance
companies (HFCs). Accordingly, the minimum stipulated CAR for FY20 was
increased from 12 per cent to 13 per cent and the minimum tier-I capital was
increased from 6 per cent to 10 per cent.
In addition, NHB
has also stipulated that the minimum CAR for HFCs would increase to 14 per cent
by March 31, 2021, and 15 per cent by March 31, 2022. In 2018, HDFC had raised
Rs 13,000 core through equity offering. Out of that, Rs 8,500 crore were infused
in the country’s largest lender HDFC Bank.
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