SBI to raise Rs 4,000 crore subordinate debt
By Our Banking Bureau | 18 Feb 2005
New
Delhi: State Bank of India (SBI) on Thursday said it would raise Rs3,000-4,000
crore subordinate debt in the next financial year and is also looking at acquisitions
in Africa, Asia besides at home.
"We are examining the use of Rs3,000-4,000 crore extra capital, which will be raised as subordinate debt during the next financial year," the SBI chairman, A K Purwar, told reporters yesterday.
SBI's associate banks have already raised Rs600-800 crore subordinate debt to meet the requirement.
"The credit growth this year has been exceptionally high at 26 per cent from January 2004 to January 2005. We will need more capital due to this credit growth," Purwar said.
He said the bank was also examining proposals for acquisition of small-to-medium sized banks in Africa, Asia and India. "We hope to finalise one or two more deals during the next financial year," he said.
Purwar said he expected the consolidation process to gain momentum. "We are looking at virtual merger of associate banks which will lead to common financial and accounting standards. A lot of virtual mergers is in the offing, but legal mergers will take some time," he said.
Latest articles
Featured articles
The $250 billion pivot: how 2026 became the year AI paid the rent
By Cygnus | 18 Feb 2026
2026 marks the shift from AI “promise” to “profitability.” Explore how India’s sovereign compute and Infosys’s revenue metrics are defining a $250B market pivot.
The analog antidote: perception, reality, and the "Windows crisis" narrative
By Cygnus | 17 Feb 2026
Viral claims of a Windows collapse contrast with market data showing a slower shift as enterprises weigh AI, hardware costs, and legacy systems.
The analog antidote: why Americans are trading algorithms for physical media
By Cygnus | 16 Feb 2026
Vinyl, books, and DVDs are seeing renewed interest as Americans seek ownership, focus, and a break from screen fatigue in an increasingly digital world.
China opens market to 53 African nations in zero-tariff pivot
By Cygnus | 16 Feb 2026
China will grant zero-tariff access to 53 African nations from May 2026, reshaping global trade ties and deepening economic links across the Global South.
The deregulation “holy grail”: Trump EPA dismantles the legal bedrock of climate policy
By Cygnus | 13 Feb 2026
The Trump EPA moves to rescind the 2009 Endangerment Finding, reshaping federal climate authority and business risk.
Tokenising the gilt: what the UK’s digital bond pilot could mean for sovereign debt
By Cygnus | 12 Feb 2026
HM Treasury selects HSBC Orion and Ashurst LLP for its Digital Gilt Instrument (DIGIT) pilot. A deep dive into the architecture, legal framework, and the shift toward near real-time settlement.
The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute
By Cygnus | 11 Feb 2026
Cisco's new Silicon One G300 targets AI data center bottlenecks as networking becomes central to compute performance.
Server CPU Shortages Grip China as AI Boom Strains Intel and AMD Supply Chains
By Cygnus | 06 Feb 2026
Intel and AMD server CPU shortages are hitting China as AI data center demand surges, pushing lead times to six months and driving prices higher.
Budget 2026-27 Seeks Fiscal Balance Amid Rupee Volatility and Industrial Stagnation
By Cygnus | 02 Feb 2026
India's Budget 2026-27 targets fiscal discipline with record capex as markets tumble, the rupee weakens and manufacturing struggles to regain momentum.


