Indian non-banking financial companies raised over 310 billion rupees, roughly $3.24 billion, in short-term debt this week alone. That figure represents about one-third of the total corporate debt issued across April and May combined.

The catalyst: a series of measures announced by the Reserve Bank of India on June 5, 2026, designed to stabilize the rupee. Those moves had the side effect of slashing corporate borrowing costs by 40 to 45 basis points, and companies wasted no time locking in cheaper financing.

What the RBI did and why it matters

The RBI held its key repo rate steady at 5.25% for the third consecutive meeting in early June 2026. What moved markets were the accompanying policy measures, including subsidized deposits and incentives for overseas fundraising, all aimed at propping up the rupee.

The bonds issued this week carry maturities of up to five years, placing them squarely in the short-to-medium-term bucket. That maturity profile suggests issuers are looking to fund near-term operational needs and expansion plans rather than locking in ultra-long-duration financing.