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Tuesday 11 November 2014

Back-to-Back Loan

Back-to-Back Loan

The Concept

Back-to-Back loan is also known as Parallel Loan or Credit SwapA financial transaction which exploits arbitrage opportunities between markets and in which two counter parties agree to exchange streams of payments over time according to

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Loan. To understand this concept we need to imagine the following:

  1. An Indian Parent company having a subsidiary abroad (Suppose US)
  2. A Foreign (US) Parent company having a subsidiary in India

We assume that the foreign parent company wants to lend USD 100 to its Indian Subsidiary for a specific period- say 3 years.

At the same time, the Indian Parent company also has to lend USD 100 to its foreign subsidiary in that country for the same period of 3 years.

We can say that the funds are to cross borders in this case. The Indian Parent company will need to exchangeRegulated market place where capital market products are bought and sold through intermediaries. its Rupees into Dollars and send is across US to its subsidiary. At the same time the US Parent company will have to exchange its dollars for Rupees and send it across to India to its subsidiaries. In both of these transactions, there is always an "Exchange Risk" exposure.

To avoid this exposure, there can be an arrangement. In this arrangement, the Indian parent company can lend Indian Rupees 5000 to the US subsidiary located in India at current rates (we suppose Rs. 50 a dollar). Simultaneously, the US parent company will lend USD 100 to the Indian subsidiary. When the loan term expires, the repayment can be done in the same way.

This arrangement is called back-to-back loan.

  • In back-to-back loan the funds move within the country but serve the purpose of cross border loans.

Back-to-Back Loans and India

Now we come to the 12thFC recommendations on Back to back Loans.

In India, the states directly can not borrow from external agencies such as IDA. The Union Government plays a role of intermediary. Before 2004, the states in India received all the external assistance on the terms as decided by the Union Budget. The loans were transferred to India states as follows:

External Agency →Government of India →State Governments.

The External agency here means the banks such as World Bank etc.

We should know that India has been a "blend borrower" in the World Bank. This means that it used to borrow on 50:50 rations of IBRD Loans and IDA Credits.

The ratio could change also. Now the Government of India passed the funds to states on basisIn a futures market, basis is defined as the cash price (or spot price) of whatever is being traded minus its futures price for the ..... of 70:30 Loans to Grant ratio. This means that this loan to grant ratio was regardless of the loan:credit composition from the World Bank.

The States argued that the Central Government was pocketing the concessional components of the loans borrowed from the external agencies and they should be allowed to approach the market directly. The Central Government argued that since it (central government) is bearing the currency risks too, the pocketing of concessional component was a fair trade.

The 12th FC gave a solution. It recommended passing loans on 'Back-to-Back' basis to State Governments. This implied that

This means that though now states enjoy the same conditions as the Union enjoys, they are also exposed to the exchange risks.

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