This would be owing to a combination of higher interest risk in the international financial market and a likely deterioration in their finances.
Vikash was speaking on Tuesday at a Moody’s and ICRA media briefing on the theme ‘Will India thrive amid global headwinds’.
Moody’s currently rates 22 corporates from India with a combined debt of $212 billion and total revenues of $668 billion at the end of March this year. Of this, 12 corporates have investment-grade ratings. They include Tata Consultancy Services, Reliance Industries, Oil & Natural Gas Corporation, Bharat Petroleum, Indian Oil, Bharti Airtel, Ultratech Cement and UPL Corp.
Some big speculative-grade corporate bonds and securities that are maturing in CY24 include Vedanta Resources $1-billion bond due in January 2024, Vedanta’s $1-billion bond due in August 2024 and JSW Steel’s $500-million bond due in April 2024. They also include Tata Motors Holdings $300-million bond due in June 2024, Tata Steel’s $1-billion bond due in July 2024 and Tata Motors $250-million bond due in October 2024.
In contrast, some of the major investment-grade bonds maturing next calendar year include Indian Oil’s $900-million bond due in January 2024, Oil India’s $500-million bond due in April 2024, Bharti Airtel’s $1-billion bond due in May 2024 and ONGC’s $750-million bond due in July 2024.
“If bond holders refuse to refinance debt, post their current maturities, then corporates have the option to look for alternative funding options such as bank borrowings, including rupee-denominated debt. This can then be swapped into foreign currency at the prevailing exchange rate.”
This could, however, result in higher finance costs for the companies.

