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High hedging costs and rupee slump slash India Inc foreign borrowing by half in March

Economy
Published on 14 May 2026
High hedging costs and rupee slump slash India Inc foreign borrowing by half in March

March borrowing fell 51% as hedging turned punitive

Foreign currency borrowing by Indian corporates dropped sharply in March, falling 51% to $5.43 billion from $11.04 billion a year earlier. RBI data points to higher interest rates, a weakening rupee, and especially rising hedging costs that made overseas loans less attractive. Even FY26 figures reflect the slowdown, with ECBs and FCCBs down 30% to $42.87 billion. Instead of borrowing at higher costs, many firms allowed annual limits to lapse.

  • March foreign currency borrowing fell 51% to $5.43 billion
  • March 2025 borrowing stood at $11.04 billion
  • ECBs and FCCBs dropped 30% to $42.87 billion in FY26
  • Rupee weakened from Rs 85.59 to Rs 94.83 per dollar in FY26
  • Rupee later hit an all-time Rs 95.96 per dollar
Read the full story at The Economic Times

This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on The Economic TimesThe Economic Times

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