Quiet week on the cards
CORPORATE BONDS

| It's that time of the year when companies will first work out their borrowing programme for the entire fiscal and only thereafter may they tap the bonds market. |
| As a result, the corporate bonds market is likely to be quiet this week, both the primary and the secondary segments. |
| In the secondary market there could be some trades by banks and mutual funds to build up a portfolio in the beginning of the year. |
| Thus they would get a good price for offloading their securities when the big players such as public sector banks start buying. |
| Commercial paper will continue to be used for meeting the short-term fund requirements till such time the corporates firm up their long-term borrowing programme. |
| Another reason for the commercial papers to be used is the growth in non-food credit and rising interest rates for long term funds raised through loans. |
| Recap: The number of commercial papers raised for the fortnight ended March 15 stood at 861 amounting to Rs 13,120 crore with interest rate ranging between 5.50-6.76 per cent. |
| The spread between a 5-year, AAA-rated paper and a corresponding government security ruled at 65 basis points. Meantime, HDFC raised Rs 325 crore for five years at an interest rate of 7.15 per cent last week. |
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First Published: Apr 04 2005 | 12:00 AM IST
