IIFL Finance's ₹2,000 Crore Bond Plan Explained: What Nirmal Jain's Funding Diversification Move Means for Your Investment Portfolio
IIFL Finance is about to do something it has never done before — raise ₹2,000 crore directly from the public. With 9% returns, AA ratings, and a chequered past involving an RBI ban, is this India’s boldest bond bet of 2026 — or a calculated comeback story?
In a move that has caught the attention of fixed-income investors across the country, IIFL Finance — one of India’s most recognised non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) — is preparing to launch its largest-ever public bond issue worth ₹2,000 crore. This is not just another capital-raising exercise. It is a decisive strategic signal about where the Indian debt market is heading, and what it means for both retail and institutional investors looking for alternatives to bank fixed deposits.
As someone who tracks India’s NBFC sector closely, I can say with confidence: the timing, structure, and intent behind this issue demand careful attention from every serious investor.
What Exactly Is IIFL Finance Doing?
According to a Reuters report dated February 11, 2026, IIFL Finance is set to launch its largest-ever public bond issue of ₹2,000 crore (approximately $220.60 million). This will be the company’s second public bond offering in the current financial year, having raised ₹500 crore through a similar exercise in April 2025.
The bonds will mature in two-year, three-year, and five-year tenors, with investors having the flexibility of annual, monthly, or end-of-term interest payment options. The coupon rates are structured as follows: 8.70% per annum on two-year bonds, 8.85% on three-year papers, and 9.00% for the five-year instruments.
Crucially, these bonds carry a top-tier credit rating — AA from CRISIL Ratings and AA+ from Brickwork Ratings — reflecting a high degree of safety and the company’s strong ability to service its debt obligations. For context, an AA rating from CRISIL means the instrument carries a “very low credit risk,” a distinction that matters enormously when Indian investors are comparing options in today’s rate environment.
The funds raised will be used for onward lending, refinancing of existing borrowings, and general corporate purposes, the company has stated.
The Man Behind the Strategy: A Note on Credibility
It is worth noting that Nirmal Jain, the Managing Director of IIFL Finance, personally confirmed the bond issue details to Reuters and articulated the company’s broader philosophy: to diversify its funding sources and tap into growing retail demand for public bonds. Jain, who co-founded India Infoline in 1995, is one of the most experienced figures in Indian retail finance. His directness in speaking to the purpose of this issue adds an important layer of credibility to the offering.
Founded nearly three decades ago and backed by Canadian billionaire investor Prem Watsa’s Fairfax Financial Holdings, IIFL Finance is not a startup seeking validation. It is a systemically important NBFC (NBFC-ND-SI) registered with the Reserve Bank of India, operating across approximately 4,858 branches spanning the length and breadth of the country, with a workforce of over 38,000 employees as of late 2024.
Why This Issue Is Strategically Significant
1. The Funding Diversification Imperative
For years, Indian NBFCs have relied heavily on bank borrowings and wholesale debt to fund their loan books. This concentration of funding sources creates a systemic vulnerability — as the IL&FS crisis of 2018 and subsequent NBFC liquidity crunch demonstrated painfully. IIFL Finance's renewed push into the public bond market is a textbook response to this structural risk.
By building a retail and institutional investor base for its bonds, the company reduces its dependence on any single source of funding. This is prudent risk management and aligns with the Reserve Bank of India's broader nudge towards NBFCs developing diversified liability profiles.
2. A Maturing Indian Bond Market
Indian companies raised approximately ₹71 billion through public bond issues in just the first nine months of the current fiscal year, according to data from the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). This is a market that is growing rapidly, driven by retail investor curiosity, declining bank deposit rates, and increased financial literacy following post-pandemic investment activity.
IIFL Finance is not just participating in this trend — it is betting heavily on it. The fact that the company's April 2025 NCD issue was subscribed 6.69 times, with the institutional category oversubscribed nearly 16 times, tells you everything about the appetite that exists.
3. A Robust Balance Sheet Backing the Issue
Any investor evaluating this bond must look at the financials. As of December 31, 2024, IIFL Finance reported a consolidated Assets Under Management (AUM) of over ₹71,410 crore, with Gross NPA at 2.42% and Net NPA at 1.01% — numbers that compare favourably within the NBFC sector. Importantly, 71.92% of the consolidated loan book is secured by adequate collateral, which significantly mitigates credit risk.
In Q2 FY26 (quarter ended September 30, 2025), the company posted a consolidated profit after tax of ₹418 crore, a robust 52% quarter-on-quarter increase. Total assets have grown 8.40% to ₹67,644.20 crore, and total equity has risen 15.75% to ₹13,955 crore. These are not the numbers of a company under distress — they reflect a business on the mend and on the move.
For added assurance, Fitch Ratings upgraded IIFL Finance's outlook to Positive in October 2025, affirming its B+ international rating.
What Indian Investors Should Evaluate Before Subscribing
The Opportunity
For retail investors in India who are tired of sub-7% bank fixed deposit rates, a 9.00% per annum yield on a five-year IIFL Finance bond with an AA+ rating from Brickwork is genuinely compelling. The minimum investment is typically ₹10,000 (at ₹1,000 face value per NCD with a minimum lot of 10), making it accessible even to middle-income investors.
The bonds are expected to be listed on both the BSE and NSE, providing liquidity that bank FDs do not offer. Allotment is typically done on a first-come, first-served basis.
The Risks to Understand
Being informed means understanding both sides. While the AA/AA+ rating provides strong comfort, NBFC bonds are not equivalent to bank deposits in terms of safety. They are not covered by Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC) protection. Credit conditions can change, and the rating, while currently high, is subject to revision.
IIFL Finance, it must be acknowledged, faced a challenging 2024 when the RBI imposed restrictions on its gold loan business citing "material supervisory concerns." The ban was lifted after compliance measures were put in place, and the company has since refocused on secured retail lending — gold loans, home finance, and secured MSME. This episode is in the past, but it is part of the institutional history that a diligent investor should know.
The Context of India's Rate Cycle
With the RBI having begun an easing cycle, interest rates in India are expected to moderate over the coming months. Investors locking in bonds at current coupon rates — especially the 9.00% available on five-year instruments — may benefit from rate lock-in if yields decline further. This is the bond investor's version of buying before the window closes.
IIFL Finance's Broader Business Model: Why It Matters
Understanding what IIFL Finance does with the money it raises is critical to evaluating the bond's safety. The company is a diversified lender with a strong focus on collateral-backed retail credit. Its product suite includes gold loans, home loans, MSME secured loans, supply chain finance, and microfinance — catering to both individual borrowers and small enterprises that are often underserved by traditional banks.
Its subsidiaries — IIFL Home Finance Limited and IIFL Samasta Finance Limited (microfinance) — extend the group's reach into housing credit and grassroots financial inclusion respectively. This is a business model aligned with India's economic development priorities.
The company has also invested in building an AI-enabled risk and governance framework and operates what it describes as a "phygital" network, combining physical branches with digital outreach. In a country where last-mile credit access remains a challenge, this hybrid model positions IIFL Finance well for the decade ahead.
Public Bonds vs. Bank FDs: The Indian Investor's Dilemma
A fundamental question many Indian investors ask is: why choose an NBFC bond over a bank FD? The answer lies in yield, liquidity, and diversification.
Top private sector banks in India currently offer FD rates between 6.5% and 7.5% for similar tenors. IIFL Finance's 9.00% five-year bond offers approximately 150-250 basis points more yield for a marginally higher but well-managed credit risk. For investors in higher income tax brackets who are eligible to hold these in demat form and potentially benefit from capital gains indexation, the after-tax math can be even more favourable depending on holding period.
The secondary market listing on BSE and NSE is another advantage — it provides an exit option that bank FDs simply do not, barring premature withdrawal with penalty.
The Larger Picture: India's Public Bond Market Coming of Age
IIFL Finance's bold ₹2,000 crore issue is part of a larger story about India's capital markets maturing. For decades, India's corporate bond market has been dominated by institutional players. Retail participation has been thin, partly due to minimum investment thresholds and partly due to limited awareness.
That is changing. SEBI's initiatives to enable UPI-based applications for public debt issues, combined with financial awareness campaigns and the proliferation of demat accounts — which crossed 170 million in India by early 2025 — are democratising access to fixed-income instruments that were once the exclusive domain of high-net-worth individuals and institutions.
When a credible, well-rated NBFC like IIFL Finance brings a ₹2,000 crore issue to the public market, it both reflects and accelerates this shift. It tells retail investors: this market is for you too.
Key Takeaways for the Indian Investor
IIFL Finance's upcoming ₹2,000 crore bond issue represents the convergence of three important currents in Indian finance: a company making a smart strategic move to diversify its funding, a bond market that is growing in depth and accessibility, and a generation of Indian investors who are looking beyond traditional instruments for meaningful returns.
The coupon rates — ranging from 8.70% to 9.00% depending on tenor — combined with the AA/AA+ credit ratings and the backing of a proven 30-year-old financial institution, make this a noteworthy option for investors who have done their homework. The April 2025 issue, which was subscribed nearly 6.7 times, already validated that investor interest is real and strong.
That said, every investment decision should be made in the context of your own risk tolerance, financial goals, liquidity needs, and tax situation. A SEBI-registered investment adviser or a certified financial planner is your best ally in determining whether an instrument like this belongs in your portfolio.
What is clear is this: India's fixed-income market is entering an exciting phase, and IIFL Finance is choosing to be one of its leading voices. For investors who are willing to look beyond the FD counter at their neighbourhood bank, the opportunity deserves a serious, informed look.
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