Business Standard

Bull run for IPOs this year

Only 6 firms dared the IPO market this year but even the lowest return given by any among these was not less than 20%

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Palak Shah Mumbai

This year has been the best for equity investors in the primary market since 2010. All the initial public offerings (IPOs) of 2012 are trading at a huge premium to their issue price. Only six companies dared the IPO market during the current year but even the lowest return was not less than 20 per cent.

Companies listed this year on the main board of stock exchanges include Multi Commodities Exchange (MCX), National Building Construction Company (NBCC), Tribhovandas Bhimji Zaveri, MT Educare, Speciality Restaurants and VKS Projects. All these companies attracted large institutional investors. (see table for percentage gains of these companies from their issue price).

 

Market experts say, if anything, Securities and Exchange Board of India's (Sebi) strict post-listing norms saved investors from losing their money in IPOs. The mad IPO rush of 2010-11 saw investors losing huge money as little-known companies were raising money and operators had a field day rigging share prices. However, after Sebi implemented new rules for IPOs at the start of this year, both promoters of small companies that lacked fundamentals and operators stayed away from the market.

INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERINGS IN 2012
CompanyIssue priceCurrent price % gain from IPO issue price
TBZ120286138
VKS Projects55130136
MT Educare8012758
MCX India1,0321,53749
NBCC10615344
Specialty Restaurant15018020

The overall loss to IPO investors during financial year 2010-11 was estimated to be in excess of Rs 3,600 crore, excluding gains from the Coal India issue. Nearly 70 per cent of the 53 issues listed during this period fell below their issue prices and the majority of these companies were little known to the market.

"There is no denying that Sebi's new rules have dealt a major blow to IPO operators. This is one reason that many companies have postponed their IPOs and 2012 saw only a few good companies dare the market," said Kishor Ostwal, managing director of CNI Global Research.

According to new Sebi rules, a company which raised less than Rs 250 crore through an IPO now attracts a circuit filter of five per cent. No speculative trading is allowed on the counter for the first 10 days and physical delivery is compulsory. For companies that raise more than Rs 250 crore, the stock attracts a 20 per cent circuit filter on the price discovered during the pre-open session. There is a pre-open call auction window for newly listing stocks between 9 and 10 am. This gives an idea of the fair price of the newly listed company’s stock to traders.

For many years, share price rigging of newly listed companies was a thriving business for some traders and brokers, in the absence of any circuit breakers for scrips on the listing day. Promoters pre-sold their issues at a discount to grey market operators, who made a quick exit from the counter post-listing.

Often, huge volatility made retail traders eager to make a quick buck bet on the counter but they would invariably lose. First-day volumes in newly-listed companies were over 10 times the total shares offered in most cases. This gave a clear indication of artificial trading.

Stock brokers in Mumbai and Ahmedabad, where a large number of manipulation cases have been detected, say circuit filter norms of Sebi were much feared. "No operator now wants to take a risk, as circuit filters would make it difficult for him to exit the counter at a decent profit. Manipulators knew that once the stock rose sharply, investors would be attracted and they could exit. However, now investors know the stock may not move up sharply due to circuit filters and they would not be attracted to companies that are not fundamentally sound to invest. This will improve the situation a lot," said a broker from Gujarat.

According to Prithvi Haldea of Prime Database, there is appetite for good IPOs and retail investors could return to the market when they see that manipulation has come down and IPOs are trading fairly above their issue price. "Sebi's norms have curbed the malpractice but pricing of the company is still a key issue," he said.

IPOs between 2009 and 2011 performed worse than the broader market. Even if one looks at the number of IPOs that delivered positive returns, investors seem to have lost. The IPOs of RDB Rasayans, Gyscoal Alloys, Sea TV Networks, Tirupati Inks, Aster Silicate, Cantabil Retail, Commercial Engineers & Body, Tarapur Transformers, Microsec Financial, BS Transcomm, Servalakshmi Paper, Brooks Laboratories, Bharatiya Global Infomedia and Midfield Industries were among the top losers. These fell 50-80 per cent from their respective offer prices. All these companies had raised below Rs 250 crore.

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First Published: Nov 29 2012 | 12:01 AM IST

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