The DVRs of three companies — Tata Motors, Jain Irrigation Systems and Future Retail — closed one-seven per cent higher on BSE, compared with a 0.18 per cent, or 44-point, fall in the Sensex.
“Most DVRs are being quoted at a discount compared to their main shares and these carry a preferential dividend option, too. So, all this makes these shares more attractive to investors. This is one of the main reasons why these stocks have seen a steady rise,” says K Subramanayam, assistant vice-president (institutional research), Asit C Mehta Securities.
A DVR share is akin to ordinary equity shares, but with fewer voting rights. Typically, companies issue DVR shares to prevent hostile takeovers and dilute voting rights. Also, these shares help strategic investors looking at a major investment in a company, but with fewer voting rights.
Globally, DVRs are usually traded on a par or at a marginal discount to their main shares.
Through the past three months, DVRs of Jain Irrigation Systems, Future Retail and Gujarat NRE Coke have more-than doubled.
The Tata Motors DVR, which surged 10 per cent to a record high of Rs 326 in intra-day trade on BSE on Thursday, closed seven per cent higher at Rs 316. In the past three months, it has rallied 66 per cent, against 14 per cent gains in its main/underlying stock.
G Chokkalingam, founder and managing director of Equinomics Research and Advisory, feels discounts to the main shares have attracted investors to DVRs. “In a nutshell, people are now trying to find valuation shelter under these stocks. I am comfortable buying the Tata Motors DVR at current levels,” he says.