Two prominent Indian real estate companies are preparing to raise a combined 26 billion rupees ($269 million) through shorter-duration debt issuances. The deals are positioned to draw strong appetite from private credit funds, which are increasingly filling the gap left by selective commercial banks.
The Key Numbers & Issuance Breakdown:
- Total Combined Fundraise: Aggregating roughly 26 billion rupees.
- Kalpataru Properties: Returning to the debt markets after a two-year hiatus to raise 16.35 billion rupees via a unique four-year and nine-day bond tranche.
- The Terms: Offering a 8% coupon payable quarterly, paired with an undisclosed redemption premium designed to sweeten the effective yield for institutional buyers.
- Anchor Commitment: GSS India Opportunities Alternate Investment Fund (AIF) has already structurally backstopped 50% of the entire issue, leaving the remaining half to be raised through open bidding.
- Shangrila Infracon India: Aiming to tap the markets for 9.50 billion rupees through three-year notes. This marks the developer’s maiden bond issue, with formal terms expected to be finalized in the coming days.
The Structural Rise of Private Credit: According to merchant banking data and recent consulting reports by EY, the real estate sector captured the absolute highest capital allocation from private credit funds in 2025—easily outstripping industrial products and healthcare. As domestic Indian banks maintain rigid, highly selective underwriting frameworks for construction and real estate lending, developers are willingly turning to structured private alternative investment funds (AIFs) to lock in swift, flexible growth capital.
