The selection of New York-based Goldman’s asset management unit is awaiting approval from Finance Minister P Chidambaram, said one of the people, who asked not to be identified as the process is private. It will then go to the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs, this person said.
An aide to President Pranab Mukherjee said in September that India was working on an exchange-traded fund that tracks state-owned companies, as the government seeks to attract money to its stock market. Officials haven’t decided which stocks will be included in the fund, one person said.
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D S Malik, a spokesman for India’s finance ministry, and Edward Naylor, a spokesman for Goldman Sachs in Hong Kong, declined to comment.
“The government is currently not able to find quality investors or get a good price when they sell shares in the market,” said Deven Choksey, managing director at K R Choksey Shares & Securities Pvt. in Mumbai. “They intend to cut the deficit through this fund but shares of these companies will also have to perform.”
The government targeted raising Rs 30,000 crore ($5.5 billion) from the sale of state assets in the year ended March 31, and managed to meet only 80 per cent of that goal, as it sought to cap the budget shortfall at 5.2 per cent of gross domestic product.
Chidambaram aims to narrow the gap to three per cent of GDP by the year ending March 2017. The government plans to raise Rs 40,000 crore this financial year selling stakes in National Aluminium Co, Rashtriya Ispat Nigam, Indian Oil Corporation, Power Grid Corporation of India, Bharat Heavy Electricals and Coal India.
ETFs were introduced in India in 2001. Currently, there are 33 ETFs having assets under management of close to Rs 11,500 crore and held by 620,000 investors. Gold ETFs dominate the ETF market in India.