Indian Firms to Invest $45-50B in Capex: Moody’s

Moody’s said, Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. (Baa3 stable) and Indian Oil will spend $6 billion and $4 billion, respectively, in each of the next two years on reserves addition, downstream integration and energy transition.

Update: 2024-08-20 11:56 GMT
India's GDP is projected to grow at over 6 per cent over the next two years, Moody's said, adding domestic demand will be the main driving force behind India's growth. (Image: X: @moodysratings)

New Delhi: Global rating agency Moody’s Ratings on Tuesday said that rated Indian companies would spend $45-50 billion annually over the next 1-2 years towards capital expenditure or capex as companies boost capacity, with the country’s most valued firm Reliance Industries alone accounting for 30 per cent of the spending.

Moody’s Ratings also said in its report on corporates in India and Indonesia that investments to increase vertical integration and achieve net zero targets will also keep spending high. “Rated Indian companies’ capex will remain elevated at around $45-50 billion annually over the next one to two years. With an annual capex budget of around $15 billion spread across its different business segments, Reliance Industries alone will account for around 30 per cent of the portfolio capex,” the rating agency said.


The oil and gas sector and Reliance Industries will collectively account for over 60 per cent of the rated Indian portfolio's spending over the next couple of years. “The seven rated oil and gas companies in India will also account for around 30 percent of rated Indian companies’ capex. These companies will spend around $15 billion annually to expand existing capacity and make green energy investments to reduce carbon transition risk,” Moody’s said.


For instance, Moody’s said, Oil and Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. (Baa3 stable) and Indian Oil will spend $6 billion and $4 billion, respectively, in each of the next two years on reserves addition, downstream integration and energy transition. “Strong earnings will continue to keep the leverage of Indian corporates low, even as companies push ahead with capital spending plans in response to consumption growth and as offshore borrowing rates remain high,” it said.


Moody’s said that credit quality would remain robust for companies in India and Indonesia. India and Indonesia are the two largest emerging market economies in Asia excluding China. These two G-20 countries have the highest number of rated companies and volume of rated debt among emerging economies in the region outside of China.


India's GDP is projected to grow at over 6 per cent over the next two years, Moody's said, adding domestic demand will be the main driving force behind India's growth. The large proportion of domestic consumption in India has and will continue to insulate the rated companies from external shocks. “In addition, as urbanisation accelerates across the country, sustained government spending on infrastructure will stimulate business activities across key industrial sectors,” Moody's said.


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