Finance
Shriram Finance eyes $150 million social loan, HSBC lead arranger
The pricing of the loan, which has a tenor of three years, would be around 200 basis points above the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR), the UK-based bank told ET.
One basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
The loan will have a greenshoe option, also of three years, and will likely be scaled up.
“Given the upbeat tone on Indian financial institutions currently, Shriram’s recent credit rating upgrade and the social loan structure of this transaction, we believe this is a very well-timed transaction and will be received positively by the bank loan market,” Chetan Joshi, managing director and head of debt finance, India, HSBC, said.
HSBC will be conducting roadshows to lenders across Singapore, Taiwan and the Middle East for the loan.The social loan is certified by Netherlands-based Sustainanalytics and qualifies as an Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) compliant form of lending. The loan would qualify as external commercial borrowing in line with Reserve Bank of India norms.Social loans, which are credit disbursements to fund projects aimed at social causes, are still relatively nascent in the Indian NBFC space.
“Our ability to execute these international capital market access transactions is a testimony of the faith that both bankers and rating agencies have placed on us,” Parag Sharma, joint managing director and CFO at Shriram Finance, said.
The launch of the social loan comes in the backdrop of a recent upgrade of four Indian financial sector entities, including Shriram Finance, by global rating agency Standard & Poor’s. The rating agency cited structural operational improvements and strong economic prospects as reasons behind the rating upgrade. Shriram Finance’s rating was upgraded from ‘BB-‘ to ‘BB’
In December 2022, Shriram Finance Limited received funding worth $100 million for a five-year term from the Asian Development Bank to support and expand lending to new energy-efficient vehicle ownerships in India.
In the previous calendar year, Shriram Finance had raised funds worth $250 million from the US Development Finance Corporation and $475 million through global bond markets.
Finance
COP29 Summit Enters Final Stretch With Nations Far Apart on Finance
Nearly 200 nations at United Nations talks in Azerbaijan are haggling over a climate finance deal for developing economies, with negotiators trying to find consensus on annual goals ranging from $200 billion to $1.3 trillion.
The wide gap in those potential targets is just one of many unsettled issues as the COP29 summit in Baku enters its final days.
Finance
COP29: Climate finance talks remain deadlocked
BAKU, Azerbaijan — Deep divisions persist as negotiations enter the final week at the United Nations Climate Conference (COP29) here, where world leaders and negotiators from 196 nations are attempting to set a new climate finance target to help poorer countries shift to clean energy and adapt to climate change.
A new report from a UN-backed expert group on climate finance floated the idea that global climate action would require at least $1.3 trillion a year by 2035 to help developing countries like the Philippines manage climate impacts.
The New Collective Quantified Goal on climate finance will replace the $100 billion per year commitment to developing countries by 2025.
READ: Midway into COP29, climate action woefully insufficient
‘Not charity’
Rich countries, including the United States and members of the European Union, acknowledge that trillions of dollars are needed but argue about who should contribute to it, which nations should receive the money, and how the funds are to be allocated.
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“Climate finance is not charity. It is 100 percent in every nation’s interest to protect their economies and people from rampant climate impacts. So countries must wrap up less contentious issues early in the week, so there is enough time for the major political decision,” said UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell at a press conference on Tuesday.
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Environment Secretary Maria Antonia Yulo-Loyzaga said the Philippine delegation to COP29, which she heads, would strive to advance the country’s interest in discussions on climate finance, mitigation, adaptation, and loss and damage, among other key issues.
“I am always hopeful [of] the process, but we have to be realistic and understanding in terms of the amount that is really needed, where it has gotten us in the number of years, and we’ve been talking beyond the quantum of climate finance,” Yulo-Loyzaga told the Inquirer.
Countries are also being urged to scale up adaptation efforts to avert rising climate impacts, which are hampered by a huge financial gap estimated by the United Nations Environment Programme (Unep) at $187 billion to $359 billion per year.
“We need to unlock a new climate finance goal at COP29 as climate is already devastating communities across the world, particularly the most poor and vulnerable,” said Inger Andersen, executive director of Unep.
Negotiators will hammer out a “COP29 package” to ensure a high-ambition and balanced package across climate mitigation, finance and adaptation, as well as key elements on just transition, gender and human rights.
Activists’ demand
While negotiators work on draft texts of a deal, climate activists are staging protests outside the plenary halls of the COP29 venue, demanding a minimum of $1.3 trillion per year in public finance for mitigation, adaptation, and loss and damage.
“We are expecting and demanding a clear ambitious target on climate finance,” said Lidy Nacpil, coordinator of the Asian Peoples’ Movement on Debt and Development.
“The sticky issue of money is affecting all other negotiations on emissions reduction, loss and damage mechanism, carbon markets because of course developing countries do not want to be locked into commitments that have no corresponding financial support,” she said.
“We are the first people to be affected by climate change and we need that climate finance as they owe that to us,” Nacpil added.
“The growing costs that the Philippines incurs due to the impacts of extreme weather events clearly indicate that it needs justice-anchored financial, technological and capacity building support from rich countries to survive in the era of climate emergency,” said Rodne Galicha, convener of Aksyon Klima Pilipinas.
PH typhoons
Naderev “Yeb” Saño, executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia and former commissioner of the Climate Change Commission, said the discussions for a new climate finance goal remained sketchy despite destructive and accelerating extreme weather events, like the recent consecutive typhoons in the Philippines.
“We cannot accept a weak deal at COP29. It needs to be very robust, not just the figure but the quality. Loss and damage fund should also be there, as well as adaptation that has a strong and clear language on developed countries being able to provide the finance. We should not leave Baku with no deal,” Saño said.
He added that climate activists had huge expectations of a positive outcome from COP29, despite discouraging political developments, such as governments refusing to attend the negotiations and the apparent withdrawal of the United States from the Paris climate agreement for the second time with the return of Donald Trump as president.
In 2020, the United States formally withdrew from the pact but rejoined it when Joe Biden took office. —Contributed
Finance
Finance Ministry and Histadrut come to agreement on budget outline
The Finance Ministry and the Histadrut labor federation have come to an agreement on the outline for the 2025 budget, according to a statement on Tuesday.
The agreement came after the government approved the state budget for 2025 and against the backdrop of the challenges facing the economy due to the security situation and the continuation of the war.
The agreements relate to payment to employees in the security and cleaning fields as part of the purchase of services from employers in the public sector and will work to promote a sectoral minimum wage in the cleaning industry.
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