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Unit III Primary Market

This document discusses the primary market and methods of raising capital through initial public offerings (IPOs). It covers topics like book building, green shoe options, fixed pricing vs book building, allotment process in a book built issue, and trends in resources mobilized through the primary market and international capital markets. The objectives are to understand various fund raising mechanisms and processes in the primary market.

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Meghna Purohit
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
105 views22 pages

Unit III Primary Market

This document discusses the primary market and methods of raising capital through initial public offerings (IPOs). It covers topics like book building, green shoe options, fixed pricing vs book building, allotment process in a book built issue, and trends in resources mobilized through the primary market and international capital markets. The objectives are to understand various fund raising mechanisms and processes in the primary market.

Uploaded by

Meghna Purohit
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 6

The Primary Market


Chapter Objectives
To understand:
1. Fund raising
2. Book- building
3. Green- shoe option
4. On line IPOs
5. Trends in resources mobilised from the primary
market
6. Trends in resources mobilised from international
capital markets
Primary Market
 New Issues Market- Market for fresh
capital
 Funds mobilized through prospectus,
rights issue and private placement
 Bonus Issue also is means to raise
capital- To boost liquidity, to bring down
stock price, to restructure capital
Primary Issues
Intermediaries to an Issue

Merchant banker- The merchant banker should be


registered with SEBI . It performs most pre-issue and
post-issue activities

Registrars to the Issue- Finalises list of eligible


allottees, ensure credit rating of shares ,to demat
accounts and process refund orders

Bankers to the Issue- They are appointed by


merchant banker to carry out transactions related to
collection of money its transfer and refunds.
Free Pricing Regime

Before 1992, CCI regulated price-


Timing , quantum and pricing decided by CCI
New companies – Shares only at par
Existing companies- If substantial reserves
could issue at premium.
Premium – Net Assets Value & P/E value
Issue price set far below market price

Earlier it was misused


- After 1992, the promoter and the
merchant banker decide the pricing
- Now the issue price is to be justified
Fixed Price offerings & Book
Building
- Made to uninformed investors
- Investors demand not taken into
account
-Under pricing of many issues as it
resulted in high cost of capital
-Long time gap between pricing date,issue
opening date and trading commenced
date

- An alternative method, Book Building


uses investors demand for shares at
various prices- Auction of shares or book
being bulit
- Investors watch the book being built –
Chart indicates bid price and no shares
being bid for. Investors can judge mkt
Fixed Pricing vs Book Building

Fixed Pricing Book Building


 Price known in Advance  Only Indicative Price

 Demand for securities Range Known


offered is known only  Demand for securities
after closure offered is known everyday
 Payment is made at the as book is built in.
time of subscription  Payment Only after
whereas refund after Allocation
allocation
Book- building Process
- The company appoints a book
runner
- Book runner submits draft
documents to SEBI- Red Herring
prospectus
- Offer of shares at a specified
price range
- Based on the bids, cut- off rate is
decided- ASBA
- Public subscription, allotment
Allotment of a Book- built issue
Category % of issue to be
allotted on a
proportionate basis
QIB 50%( 5% of the QIB to
be
reserved
for MFs)
HNI 15%
Retail Investor 35%
Retail individual investor – who bids in a book built
issue for a value not more than Rs. 1,00,000
.
Anchor Investor
 Introduced in June 2009 to enhance issuer’s ability to
sell the issue , generate confidence in minds of retail
investors and better discovery of price
 Has to be QIB that buy large chunk of shares a day
before IPO opens.
 Issuer can allot upto 30% of its institutional quota to
such investors
 Pays upfront 25% and remaining 75% within two days
of close of issue
 Hold shares for at least one month
Benefits – Book Building

 Reap benefits arising from price and demand


discovery.
 Cost and time for making public issues lowered.
Process simplified
 Price falling below par after listing remote as investors
trust the price at which syndicate members purchased
the price
Limitations – Book Building
 In India it still depends on good faith
 Lack of transparency at critical steps
 Issuers may have to sell cheap due to collective bargain
power of financial institutions
 Role of retail investors in determining prices is minimum
and thus judging the issue can be difficult
 Share of public offer in total capital reduced from 75%
to 25% in some cases 10%. Effectively for retail
investors(35% of 25%) 8.75%
 https://youtu.be/R-dorvdzH1o
Reverse Book- building

- Used by companies to delist or buy back


their shares
- Helps in discovering exit price
- Similar to reverse auctions
Green- shoe option

- An option of allocating shares in excess


of the shares included in the public issue.

- Extent of 15% of issue size

- Post listing price stabilising mechanism

- Mitigates volatility

- Enhances investor confidence


Public Issues
 IPO :It is an offering of either a fresh
issue of securities or an offer for sale of
existing securities or both by an unlisted
company for the first time to the public.
 FPO :It is an offer of sale of securities by
a listed company. FPO is also known as
subsequent or seasoned public offering.
Rights issue
- issue of new shares to existing shareholders on
a pro-rata basis
- to be kept open for at least 30 days and not
more than 60 days.
Why rights ?
- to reward shareholders
- to reflect the stock’s true worth
- to hike promoter’s stake
Preferential Allotment
- An issue of shares to a select group of persons under section 81
of the Companies Act.
- Select group consists of
promoters
foreign partners
technical collaborators
private equity funds
- Why preferential allotment ?
- to enhance promoter’s holding
- to cash in on the bull run
- to issue shares by way of ESOPs.
- for takeover of company
- quick fund raising at low cost
Private Placement Market
- Direct sale of securities to a few investors through
merchant bankers.
- Preferred route between 1997-98 to 2002-03
- Dormant conditions in the capital market
- Time as well as cost of issue is low
- Tailor- made issues
- Less formalities
- Private placement now regulated
-
Resource Mobilisation from
International Capital Markets
Sources: GDRs / ADRs
FCCBs
ECBs
GDRs and ADRs – equity instruments issued abroad
– represent one or more shares of
the issuing company
_ two- way conversion
_ GDRs sold to institutional investor
- ADRs sold both to institutional and retail
investors
- Listed and traded on a foreign stock exchange
- GDRs can be converted into ADRs.
ECBs
- Supplement domestic resources
- Low cost of borrowing
- Two routes of access
a. Automatic
b. Approval

LIBOR+100 basis points


FCCBs

- bonds issued by Indian companies in foreign


currency
- fixed interest / coupon rate
- convertible into ordinary shares
- bonds listed and traded abroad

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