India’s HDFC bank executes rare trade to hedge rate risk

 

Bloomberg

India’s largest mortgage financier used an unusual trade to hedge some of its borrowings against interest rate volatility as it sought to expand its range of tools to manage risk.
Housing Development Finance Corp, (HDFC) the nation’s biggest rupee-bond issuer this year, used a so-called total return swap to hedge rate risks on a debt issuance which closed last month, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing private arrangements. The lender had been primarily using overnight-index swaps before, they said.
The switch in hedging tools comes as markets are buffeted by surging policy rates, with the RBI having hiked by 140 basis points since May to tackle inflation. The central bank said last week that it will do “whatever it takes” to bring down price pressures, though some traders had expected it to tone down its hawkishness.
Under the interest-rate derivative contract, banks bought easily tradable sovereign bonds on behalf of the Mumbai-based financier on their treasury books, and HDFC would pay the overnight Mibor rate and a spread to the lenders, the people said. The spread acted like fees that HDFC paid to the banks which had taken a bond position for financier.
With more than 40% of the financier’s $66 billion borrowings coming from debt securities, managing the possible yield mismatch between the variable-rate loans it offers and the fixed rates at which it borrows is vital for HDFC. The swap agreement makes the liability and borrowing variable for HDFC, thereby protecting its lending margins.
HDFC last month raised a combined 181.1 billion rupees ($2.3 billion) through three debt offerings.
Of the total, 40 billion rupees was raised through notes due in March 2024 at 7.28% coupon, 31.11 billion rupees via bonds maturing in June 2027 at 7.77% and the remainder through a jumbo 10-year offering at 8%.
Not all companies in India use the total return swap to hedge their interest-rate risk. That’s because some aren’t in the lending business, and so there is no need to hedge risk, and also no other shadow financier in the nation has a balance sheet that’s close to HDFC’s in size.

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