Firms, banks float bonds after RBI raises risk weights Large corporates such as Bharti Airtel and lending institutions like Bank of Baroda, Canara Bank and Small Industries Development Bank Of India (SIDBI), among others, have raised Rs 45,493 crore via bonds since November 17, a day after the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) hiked risk weights on unsecured credit, data compiled by FE showed. The quantum is significantly higher than Rs 24,161.3 crore raised in October. Canara Bank and Bank of Baroda raised Rs 5,000 crore each via infrastructure bonds at 7.68% coupon rate in late November. SIDBI, too, raised Rs 4,887 crore at 7.83% coupon. Bharti Airtel, meanwhile, raised Rs 8,000 crore via NCDs in three separate tranches on December 1 at an average yield of 8.95%. “The RBI’s circular on higher risk weightages has enhanced the supply of bonds. Though most banks and NBFCs are well capitalised, the market expects more supply of bonds in coming days,” said Venkatakrishnan Srinivasan, founder and managing partner at Rockfort Fincap LLP, a debt advisory firm. Systemic liquidity deficit touched an all-time high of Rs 2.34 trillion in late November and affected the money market yields by 10-15 bps, he said. As per sources, Canara Bank will likely issue another Rs 3,500 crore via additional tier-I bonds on December 7, Rural Electrification Corp will raise up to Rs 2,000 crore on December 8 and Bank of Maharashtra may issue tier-II bonds amounting to Rs 1,000 crore on December 12.
2. Warren Buffett talked about his business partner Charlie Munger in his letter. He said they both think alike but what it takes Warren Buffett a page to explain, Charlie Munger sums up in a sentence. Charlie Munger’s version, moreover, is always more clearly reasoned.
The lesson for investors: “I will add to Charlie’s list a rule of my own: Find a very smart high-grade partner – preferably slightly older than you – and then listen very carefully to what he says,” Warren Buffett said.
3. Warren Buffett emphasised that his long-time business partner Charlie Munger and he are business pickers, not stock pickers. He further said that efficient markets exist only in textbooks.
“We own publicly-traded stocks based on our expectations about their long-term business performance, not because we view them as vehicles for adroit purchases and sales. That point is crucial: Charlie and I are not stock-pickers; we are business pickers,” Warren Buffett said.