Why Japanese Investors Are Betting Big on India’s Railway Financing Arm


New Delhi : Japanese investors are showing growing confidence in India’s infrastructure story, with strong interest in Indian Railway Finance Corporation (IRFC), the dedicated market borrowing arm of Indian Railways.

IRFC recently wrapped up a two-day External Commercial Borrowing (ECB) roadshow in Tokyo on Feb. 26–27, aimed at diversifying its funding base and lowering borrowing costs. The delegation was led by Executive Directors Deepa Kotnis (Finance) and Sunil Kumar Goel (Business Development), who met with a range of Japanese regional investors known for their preference for stable, long-term investments.

Deepening India–Japan Financial Ties

The Tokyo roadshow was supported by mandated lead arrangers Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group. Discussions focused on raising long-tenor funds at competitive rates while strategically diversifying IRFC’s currency exposure—an increasingly important goal amid volatile global markets.

What Attracted Japanese Investors

During one-on-one meetings, IRFC highlighted several factors that resonated strongly with the Japanese investment community:

  • Sovereign Backing: IRFC’s credit rating is on par with the Government of India, reinforced by a stable rating from the Japan Credit Rating Agency (JCRA).
  • Infrastructure Scale: Investors were briefed on IRFC’s central role in financing India’s massive railway modernization push, as well as its recent expansion into funding high-quality public sector undertakings and infrastructure projects beyond the rail ministry.
  • Financial Resilience: The corporation showcased its strong asset-liability management framework and a long track record of predictable, stable cash flows.

Why Japan Matters

Japanese regional investors are widely regarded as providers of patient capital, often willing to invest for longer durations at relatively lower yields. For IRFC, tapping this pool helps reduce dependence on domestic markets and any single overseas source of funding.

The positive response in Tokyo reflects rising global confidence in India’s long-term infrastructure growth and in IRFC’s credit strength as a quasi-sovereign issuer.

As India’s transportation and logistics needs continue to expand, IRFC’s outreach to Japan fits squarely within its broader strategy: secure diversified, cost-effective global funding to keep the country’s rail and infrastructure ambitions on track.

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