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Adani Ports gets about $150 million loan from DBS for capex
Bloomberg | May 22, 2025 6:23 PM CST

Synopsis

Adani Ports secured a $150 million bilateral loan from DBS Group, signaling a recovery in lender confidence after recent challenges. The four-year dollar loan, priced at 200 basis points above SOFR, will fund capital expenditure. This marks the group's first loan from a global bank since the US Department of Justice indictment.

Adani Ports & Special Economic Zone Ltd. raised about $150 million through a bilateral loan agreement with DBS Group Holdings Ltd., according to people familiar with the matter, as the Indian conglomerate continues to restore lender confidence.

The proceeds of the four-year dollar loan will be used for capital expenditure, the people said, asking not be identified because the information is private. The facility has been priced at about 200 basis points above the benchmark Secured Overnight Financing Rate, they said.

The all-in-price, including the hedging cost, is about 5.5%, one of the person said. DBS declined to comment. An Adani Group representative did not offer any immediate comments on the transaction.

Billionaire Gautam Adani-owned conglomerate, with interests stretching from ports to green energy, is steadily regaining creditor confidence following a US Department of Justice indicted Adani over an alleged bribery plot in November. The bilateral loan is the group’s first from a global bank since the indictment, one of the person said.

Last month, the group raised about $750 million through an offshore private placement bond to fund an acquisition of a construction firm. BlackRock Inc. subscribed to about a third of the issuance. Separately, the conglomerate is in talks with foreign banks including Barclays Plc, First Abu Dhabi Bank PJSC and Standard Chartered Bank Plc for a $750 million loan for its airport unit.

Representatives for Adani and his companies recently met US administration officials to discuss potentially dismissing criminal charges levied against him in the bribery probe, Bloomberg reported earlier this month.


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