India is one of the world’s busiest markets for initial public offerings. It has had more companies debuting over the past year than China and Japan, combined. But if history is any guide, in the long run, most of them will turn out to be duds.
Yet, such is the attraction of the “pop” — large listing-day returns — that this fever won’t abate.
Something is badly broken. YK2 Partners, a boutique firm that invests only in Indian public markets, has done the math for two decades of initial fundraising by the country’s firms. Analysts at Mumbai- and London-based YK2 considered all the 300-plus mainboard issuances since January 2004 with a 10-year trading history. The average IPO in this set has returned -3.5 per cent a year, according to their calculations, turning a Rs 100 ($1.2) investment into Rs 70 a decade later.
It doesn’t matter whether they listed in 2004 or 2013, or any year in between. Indian IPOs have failed miserably at generating additional returns for investors over what they would have earned passively from just owning a broad benchmark. About 77 per cent have underperformed the NSE500 Index over a 10-year period, with average underperformance of more than 14 per cent annually. In other words, the Rs 100 not invested in debutants could have, with very little effort, become Rs 280 .
“We cynically characterize the IPO process as a scheme orchestrated by management, private equity investors, anchor investors, investment bankers, media, etc.,” YK2’s co-founders Arun Agarwal and Vinod Nair, wrote in a note accompanying their research. “It might make sense for investors looking for an IPO pop but not for long term investors like us.”
It’s the regulator’s job to ensure that companies with reasonably solid prospects come to public markets and offer stock at a price that allows long-term wealth creation. That the local IPO market is falling far short of this ideal is something the Securities and Exchange Board of India has been aware for a long time. Yet, some of the steps that the SEBI has attempted or contemplated proved too contentious.
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One of them was grading of IPOs (similar to credit rating for bonds). Made mandatory from 2007, grading became optional in 2014 amid intense lobbying. Another idea was to let retail investors return stock to the controlling shareholders at the issue price after three months of significant underperformance. This safety net was considered for years and then dropped.
Indian IPOs Are One-Day Wonders | Over any long-term horizon, they underperform the benchmark
But it should still be possible to improve the quality of the primary capital market. Clearly, the current disclosures-based pricing regime is not up to dealing with the challenge. Just a couple of months ago, Madhabi Puri Buch, the SEBI chair, said that often the justification supplied by companies for high IPO valuations was “nothing but some meaningless English words.”
There may be a simple reason why verbiage can so easily masquerade as value: The average IPO delivers an average 25 per cent listing-day gain, and India’s rich have a savings glut. Ben Bernanke, the former Federal Reserve chairman, has in the past held a “global savings glut” — a pool of capital flowing out of China and oil-producing nations — responsible for low interest rates. In India’s case, it’s capital controls that put a limit on how much the affluent class can invest overseas. Any excess of local savings ends up chasing domestic assets, from real estate to IPOs.
Property transactions have some inertia built into them, but punts on IPOs are very quickly flipped. That explains the average oversubscription of 44 times in recent years. So how to throw some sand into the wheel? The SEBI chief said Friday that the regulator is investigating investment banks that artificially inflate share applications to create a false impression of demand.
Cleaning up the market is a good first step, but it won’t be enough. YK2’s Agarwal suggests that the SEBI should consider a mandatory lock-in period of one year for all IPO investors so that subscription is driven by fundamentals and not the lure of a pop. More disclosures will be just more words. They can’t break this nexus of unusual demand and opportunistic supply. Only more skin in the game can.
Disclaimer: This is a Bloomberg Opinion piece, and these are the personal opinions of the writer. They do not reflect the views of www.business-standard.com or the Business Standard newspaper