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The current fiscal is also likely to witness a 25 per cent increase in interest servicing cost, it added.
To tame the stubbornly high inflation, the Reserve Bank has hiked the key policy rates by 250 bps so far since May 2022 and at 6.50 per cent it is already 25 bps more than the pre-February 2020 levels.
The cost of debt is likely to increase across all categories irrespective of the size of the corporate in FY24 compared to FY22. A sharp rise in interest rates and higher working capital financing are likely to increase interest outflow to Rs 3.38 lakh crore in FY24 from Rs 2.52 lakh crore in FY22, said the report, which is based on the interest costs on a net basis of around 3,365 non-financial, debt-heavy corporates with a total debt of about Rs 36 lakh crore as of H1 FY23.
Interest cost has increased for all sectors led by chemicals, crude oil, iron & steel and infrastructure in FY22. On average, there will be a CAGR growth of 16 per cent across all sectors between FY22 and FY24. For the top debt-heavy sectors, interest costs will rise to Rs 2.84 lakh crore in FY24 from Rs 2.09 lakh crore in FY22, as per the report.
The Rs 5 lakh crore drawdown from the reverse repo in FY23 has enabled banks to address a surge in the gap between incremental credit and deposit costs, but this will not be available in FY24. Therefore, even if the policy rate remains stable for FY24, rates in the system will continue to face upward pressure.
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