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Brinks Report > Blog > Economy > India’s $3.5 Billion Private Credit Deal: Big Money, Bigger Risks
Economy

India’s $3.5 Billion Private Credit Deal: Big Money, Bigger Risks

Dolon Mondal
Last updated: May 29, 2025 11:47 am
Dolon Mondal
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India has just seen its biggest-ever private credit deal—worth ₹298 billion ($3.5 billion). Struggling conglomerate Shapoorji Pallonji Group (SP Group) sold a three-year, zero-coupon bond to major global lenders like BlackRock, Pimco, Ares, and Deutsche Bank.

On paper, it looks like a bold move. But dig deeper, and the desperation starts to show.

Trulli

Why This Matters to You

Private credit is booming. But with nearly 25% of their cash sitting idle (as per BNP Paribas), lenders are chasing riskier deals. This one proves that when there’s too much money and not enough safe bets, even shaky borrowers look golden.

SP Group, once a construction giant, has seen better days. Banks have backed away. Bond yields have jumped. Yet, it just raised billions without promising to pay any interest. That’s right—zero-coupon means no regular payouts.

The only way lenders make money? Buy cheap now, get a fat 19.75% return later—if all goes well.

Also Read South Korea’s Central Bank Cuts Interest Rate, Slashes 2025 Growth Outlook

The Red Flags Are Waving

This deal is layered with safety nets. Three of them.

  1. Asset sales trigger early repayment.
  2. Real estate arm offers a full guarantee.
  3. SP Group pledges 9% of Tata Sons as collateral.

Now that last one might sound rock solid. After all, Tata Sons owns big names like TCS, Tata Motors, and more. That 9% stake could be worth $8–19 billion, depending on market value.

But here’s the twist: Tata Trusts, which controls Tata Sons, says those shares aren’t “freely transferable.” Translation? If things go south, lenders may have trouble cashing in.

What’s Really Going On?

This isn’t just a bold bet on recovery. It’s a signal that the private credit market has more money than judgment right now. When serious institutions start loaning billions to shaky borrowers on thin guarantees, it says less about confidence—and more about pressure.

It’s like buying a mansion with cracked walls because you have a bag full of cash and nowhere else to spend it.

Private credit might be the hottest trend in global finance. But this deal shows its Achilles heel: a hunger so deep, it eats risk for breakfast.

India may celebrate this record-breaking deal. But for investors, it’s a reminder—high yield often comes with high nerves.

Also Read Indices Trade Flat, but Metal Stocks Lead the Morning Shine

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