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EXIM Bank raises $1 billion through 10-year and 30-year dollar bonds

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
January 6, 2026
in Business
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EXIM Bank raises  billion through 10-year and 30-year dollar bonds
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The Export-Import Bank of
India (EXIM Bank) has ‍accepted bids worth $1 billion for its
dual-tranche longer-duration ​U.S. dollar-denominated bonds, two
merchant bankers ‌said on Tuesday, in the ​first such debt issue
in the country for 2026.

The lender raised $500 million through 10-year bonds at
5.00%, a spread of 85 basis points over the 10-year U.S.
Treasury yield, and a similar ​amount through the sale of ⁠30-year
bonds at 5.75%, a spread of 95 bps over the comparable U.S.
yield

The lender initially provided ​guidance on a ⁠spread of
115-140 bps, but strong demand led to aggressive pricing.

EXIM Bank did not reply to a Reuters ‌query seeking comment.

Analysts at U.S.-based ‌brokerage CreditSights said in a note
that they expected the fair ‍value for the issuance to be a
spread of 90-105 bps, indicating the ‍current pricing is
aggressive.

“Given that the longer duration 30-year tranche will likely
tighten to trade flat to the 10-year over time, we thus see fair
value for the 30-year at a spread of 105 bps,” it said.

The bonds are ⁠rated BBB– by Fitch Ratings, which is in line
with the ​issuer rating.

The bonds will be listed in ⁠Singapore, London, and India,
and the proceeds will be used for funding, including loans for
overseas investment and the import of capital goods, ⁠the bankers
added.

Published on January 6, 2026

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