Synopsis
Sagarmala Finance Corp. will raise 100 billion rupees in FY27. This funding will support ports, shipbuilding, and waterways. The company will borrow through bonds, term loans, and foreign currency. Sagarmala aims to disburse up to 90 billion rupees in loans by March 2027. It also seeks government equity infusion to support its growth.
New Delhi: Sagarmala Finance Corp., India's first maritime-focused non-banking financial company, plans to raise as much as 100 billion rupees ($1.08 billion) in financial year 2027 to expand lending for ports, shipbuilding, and waterways, a top executive said.
The state-owned company will raise the money through bonds, term loans and foreign-currency borrowings, Managing Director L.V.S. Sudhakar Babu said in an interview with Reuters on Thursday, adding that the firm will tap the bond market for the first time in June this year.
Also Read: Attacks on merchant shipping completely unacceptable, says Jaishankar amid West Asia situation
Sagarmala, established in 2016 under the Ministry of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, received a non-banking finance company (NBFC) license in June 2025.
It also administers the government's 250 billion-rupee Maritime Development Fund, which includes a 50 billion-rupee Interest Incentivisation Fund that would allow it to provide interest subsidies to borrowers.
Live Events
The company aims to disburse 80 billion rupees to 90 billion rupees in loans in the year ending March 2027 and has already sanctioned 37 billion rupees for two greenfield ports in Andhra Pradesh, taking the total sanctions to 111 billion rupees so far, Babu said.
Sagarmala is also seeking a 20 billion-rupee equity infusion from the government to maintain a healthy debt-to-equity ratio as it grows its loan book.
Also Read: A golden opening awaits Indians this Akshaya Tritiya in the middle of global gloom
"As per industry standards, we can leverage up to seven to eight times our capital base," Babu said. "In the event the proposed equity infusion takes some time, we may consider raising funds through perpetual bonds later in the year."
The company has received a credit rating of AA+ from rating agencies Care and India Ratings.
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel)
Kumbh boom to Iran blues: IndiGo, Air India et al. face INR30k-cr hit
Why PNG for every kitchen remains a pipe dream amid LPG crunch
Is private sector corruption free? Here's the reality...
How a cozy club controls India’s gold imports
Two Trades for Today: A hospital chain for a gain of 3.07%, a mid-cap iron and steel maker’s stock for an almost 6% rise
F&O Radar: Bull Call Spread strategy for Siemens
1
2
3