City
Epaper

RBI conducts Rs 8,450 crore state government securities auction; cut-off yields between 6.43% and 7.43%

By ANI | Updated: August 12, 2025 14:44 IST

Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], August 12 : The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday announced the results of its ...

Open in App

Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], August 12 : The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday announced the results of its latest yield and price-based auction of State Government Securities (SGS), raising a total of Rs 8,450 crore from various states and Union Territories. The cut-off yields in the auction ranged from 6.4377 per cent to 7.43 per cent.

According to the RBI release, Bihar mobilised the highest notified amount in the auction with a Rs 2,000 crore issue carrying a cut-off yield of 7.43 per cent for a 30-year tenor. Telangana followed with a Rs 1,000 crore borrowing for a 35-year tenor at a cut-off yield of 7.33 per cent.

Goa raised Rs 100 crore at a yield of 7.12 per cent for an 11-year tenor, while Jammu and Kashmir garnered Rs 350 crore at a yield of 7.35 per cent for 15 years.

Haryana's Rs 1,000 crore issue was a re-issue of the 8.62 per cent Haryana SDL 2028 bond, originally floated on September 3, 2018, and fetched a cut-off price of Rs 105.96, translating to a yield of 6.4377 per cent.

Maharashtra accounted for the bulk of re-issues in the auction, cumulatively raising Rs 4,000 crore through four separate tranches.

These included, Rs 1,000 crore of 7.14 per cent SGS 2045, re-issued at Rs 98.07 with a yield of 7.3248 per cent.

Second was of Rs 1,000 crore of 7.14 per cent SGS 2046, re-issued at Rs 98.11 with a yield of 7.3170 per cent.

Third auction of Rs 1,000 crore of 7.17 per cent SGS 2054, re-issued at Rs 97.07 with a yield of 7.4171 per cent.

While last Rs 1,000 crore of 7.16 per cent SGS 2055, re-issued at Rs 96.92 with a yield of 7.4173 per cent.

The RBI release suggests that the notified amounts for all states and UTs in the auction were fully accepted, reflecting robust demand from the market participants.

State Development Loans (SDLs), are issued by the State Governments to fund their fiscal deficit. Each state can borrow up to a set limit. These securities carry similar risk profiles to central government securities but generally offer higher yields, making them more attractive to institutional investors seeking better returns.

The RBI, acting as the debt manager for state governments, conducts these auctions under its regular borrowing calendar.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIran FM Abbas Araghchi lands in Pakistan for third visit in 48 hours

National"He should not move such letters...": Former Uttarakhand HC Judge slams Kejriwal's stance over Delhi HC's recusal case verdict

InternationalKing Charles arrives in DC amid trans-Atlantic tensions, 250th anniversary cheers

PoliticsBJP National President Nitin Navin visits Jaipur after Bengal campaign, holds key organisational meeting

Politics"Change is certain": Dharmendra Pradhan predicts TMC exit as Bengal enters phase 2 polls

Business Realted Stories

BusinessZero-duty access under India-New Zealand FTA expected to lift gems, jewellery exports to USD 50 mn in three years: GJEPC

BusinessMeta announces two partnerships to boost reliable power for its AI infrastructure, data centre needs

BusinessPiyush Goyal explores avenues for exporters to leverage various FTAs

BusinessAdani Total Gas Q4 profit rises 4%, revenue up 16% on higher volumes

BusinessCERT-In warns of rising AI-driven cyber threats amid ‘Mythos’ concerns