A sale will shift part of a record Rs 7.1 trillion ($103 billion) of planned government borrowings abroad, leaving private companies with more room to borrow. The downside is that the issuance could increase India's exposure to global shocks.
"Expanding sovereign liabilities could magnify macro risks if essential reforms on improving public finances remain inadequate," said Suvodeep Rakshit, an economist at Kotak Institutional Equities Ltd in Mumbai. "Historical experiences of countries with high exposure to foreign capital and weak macro fundamentals such as Argentina, Thailand, Brazil, Turkey have not been pleasant."
Selling rupee debt abroad will be about 150 basis points cheaper for the government, than doing a hedged dollar-bond issuance that is swapped back into the local currency, according to Ajay Marwaha, London-based head of investment advisory at Sun Global Investments Ltd. Another advantage is that the currency risk lies with the investor, not the issuer.