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SME offerings make a comeback in CY2021, mop-up 3x over last year
Last year as investors preferred larger companies that were deemed more resilient amid Covid; Calendar 2018 was the best year for SME IPOs, with 141 offerings garnering Rs 2,287 cr
Collections from public share sales of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) have seen a resurgence this year after seeing a lull in CY20 in the aftermath of the pandemic.
SMEs have mopped up Rs 501 crore from 43 offerings this year, more than 3 times that were garnered last year from 27 offerings.
According to experts, the number of issuances dropped last year as investors preferred larger companies that were deemed to be more resilient amid the pandemic rather than risking their capital on smaller names.
Calendar 2018 was the best year for SME IPOs, with 141 offerings garnering Rs 2,287 crore.
Half of the companies that have listed this year have made money for investors. Top gainers this year include EKI Energy Services (2904 per cent gain over issue price), BEW Engineering (451 per cent) and Rangoli Tradecomm (255 per cent).
The strike rate is similar over the long term, with 54 per cent, or 313 out of 585 companies, making money for investors since 2012. Twenty three companies have returned in excess of 1,000 per cent during this period and 168 have given returns of over 100 per cent. Twenty three have slid more than 90 per cent. Aditya Vision (5,546 per cent), Sangam Advisors (5,439 per cent) and Lancer Container Lines (4,821 per cent) have clocked the most returns. In all, 195 companies have migrated to the mainboard so far.
Despite the possibility of high returns, experts said there was a chance of losing one’s entire capital in SME stocks. Analysing these firms could be tough because they are not tracked by analysts and there is limited data in the public domain. Investors are left to themselves when it comes to gauging the credibility of promoters.
The SME segment has been grappling with lack of liquidity and lacklustre institutional participation. According to experts, the need is to bring in priority investing from big institutional players and tweak the lot size to improve liquidity. The minimum lot size varies between Rs 1 lakh and Rs 1.5 lakh.
The BSE and the National Stock Exchange of India (NSE) had launched separate SME platforms in 2012 and 2013, after the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) came up with easier listing and disclosure guidelines to help small companies tap the capital market.
Besides improved transparency, an IPO route for SMEs reduces their dependence on debt financing and helps them maintain their debt-equity ratio efficiently, said experts.
Listed SMEs with good ratings are able to get loans at lower interest rates than the market.
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