The city-based lender, among the last of the banks to start operations, issued 5.35 crore new shares to investors, it said in a statement.
The offer, which was oversubscribed five times, was the first after the new government assumed charge on May 26 and came amid the upbeat sentiment created by Narendra Modi's victory in the Lok Sabha elections.
The issue was priced at Rs 550 per share compared with yesterday's close of Rs 548.15 a piece.
"This capital raising has been done to further augment our core tier-I capital base/capital adequacy, and enhance the long-term resources," Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Rana Kapoor said.
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The total capital adequacy of the bank has increased to 18 per cent, with core tier-I capital adequacy at about 13 per cent. The levels were earlier at 14.4 per cent and 9.1 per cent, respectively, relatively low for a private lender.
Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Equities, HSBC Securities, JM Financial, Motilal Oswal and UBS Securities acted as the book running lead-managers to the issue, it said.
Yes Bank shares climbed 3.56 per cent to Rs 569.45 at the close on the BSE today, while the benchmark 30-share Sensex fell 0.07 per cent.
The placement by the bank, whose promoters are fighting a pitched battle over individual rights in court, comes after the board approved extension of the deadline for the share sale last month.
As of March 31, the stake of the promoter group (MD and CEO Rana Kapoor and Madhu Kapur and family) stood at 25.55 per cent.
The RBI wants promoters of banks to gradually lower their shareholding to 10 per cent and each bank has submitted its road map to achieve this to the central bank.