Home           Services       Team           Blog                 

Foreign Currency Loans

 

What are foreign currency loans?

These loans are denominated in foreign currency.  The principal as well as interest need to be serviced in foreign currency.  In case the business is earning foreign currency through export of goods or services, it can service the foreign currency loans out of the foreign currency remittances against the exports.  In case the company is not exporting and caters to Indian market alone, then the company has to buy the foreign currency required pay interest or repay the loan from authorized foreign currency dealers (this is permitted by RBI for legitimate, trade transactions).

 

Why foreign currency loans?

Interest rates in India are high compared to those prevailing in advanced countries (typically 4-5% p.a.).  High interest rates, coupled with sluggish economic conditions are making borrowing costs unsustainable.  The reserve bank of India (RBI) is rightly not lowering interest rates in the face of stubborn inflation, high fiscal deficit and unsatisfactory economic growth.

 

In this scenario, companies are looking to raise cheaper foreign currency loans to meet their fund requirements.

 

 

What are the various kinds of foreign currency loans?

 

Long term loans:

 

·       External Commercial Borrowings (ECBs)

·       Foreign Currency Term Loans (FCTLs)

·       Foreign Currency Convertible Bonds (FCCBs)

 

Short term loans:

 

·       Buyers’ Credit

·       Foreign Currency Packing Credit (PCFC)

·       Foreign Currency Bill Purchase/ Discounting (FCBP)

 

What is the rate of interest?

Foreign currency loans priced by adding a spread to the London inter bank offer rate (LIBOR).  The spread added by the lending banks is usually 2.5-4%.  LIBOR itself keeps fluctuating depending on market conditions, but in the present conditions (August 2012) it is less than 1%.  Therefore, today a foreign currency loan can be obtained any where between 3.5 to 4.75%.  This rate/ cost is bare cost and does not take care of the currency and/ or LIBOR fluctuation risks.

 

Hedging Cost

In order to protect one self from currency and LIBOR rate fluctuations, one has to incur hedging costs.  Foreign currency earners can avoid hedging against currency fluctuations, but still have protect themselves against fluctuations in LIBOR.  Hedging costs themselves are not static, but quite dynamic.

 

Finally, in the present scenario, an exporter may be able to raise foreign currency loans in the range of 5.5-6%.  A domestic player, without a natural currency hedge will be able to raise a foreign currency loan, fully hedged, at about 10-11%.

 

 

Contact us!  We arrange all kinds of foreign currency loans.

Tel: 0124-4386541; Cell:  P.Anand (Director) +91-9560400681, Suresh Sharma (Customer Support Manager) 9312636681.

anand  @ acebuiss.com   /  sales  @  acebuiss.com

                                                                                                                                     

Professionals