”The bank has been waiting for an opportune time to enter the market, but yields have stayed high for the last several weeks, and hence the bank is avoiding tapping the market in the near term,” one of the sources said.
The sources declined to be named as they are not authorised to speak to the media.A spokesperson from SBI said the bank does not comment on such matters.
Yields on India’s 10-year corporate bonds rated ’AAA’ have risen 15 basis points since early February despite India’s central bank cutting the policy repo rate by 25 basis points and infusing hefty liquidity into the banking system.”SBI assessed its asset-liability position and despite having the board approvals, decided not to go through with the bond issues for now,” the second source said.
The bank will look at its funding requirement afresh in the next fiscal year, the person said.
SBI’s planned bond issues included ₹5,000 crore through Basel III-compliant additional Tier-I perpetual bonds and ₹10,000 crore through 15-year infrastructure bonds.
The bank had raised ₹5,000 crore at 7.98% in October via perpetual bonds.
Its state-run peers Bank of India, Punjab National Bank and Bank of Maharashtra raised an aggregate of ₹7,252 crore through infrastructure bonds in February, just over half of what they had intended to raise.