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ONGC FPO deferred to April 5

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Press Trust Of India New Delhi

The government has pushed back the Rs 11,500-crore share sale of state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) to the next financial year and the public offering is now slated to open on April 5, a senior official said on Thursday. The follow-on public offer (FPO) was originally scheduled to open on March 15 but has now been rescheduled.

“The rescheduling is partly because of delay in appointment of independent directors on ONGC board to fulfil Sebi’s (Securities and Exchange Board of India) listing requirement,” he said.

According to the schedule now drawn, the FPO would open on April 5 and close on April 8.

 

The government is selling its five per cent stake or 427.77 million equity shares in the FPO that in Thursday’s closing price of Rs 269.85 on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) will fetch over Rs 11,540 crore.

After the offer, the government stake in ONGC would come down to 69.14 per cent from the current 74.14 per cent.

Roadshows to promote the share offering in the nation’s biggest explorer and highest profit earning company, which were to be held in India and abroad from March 2 to 9, have now been rescheduled to begin on March 21.

The official said ONGC was ready with its red-herring prospectus (RHP) for the FPO but was awaiting appointment of at least one independent director on its board to meet market regulator Sebi’s listing requirement. ONGC has six functional directors, besides the chairman. It also has two government nominee directors taking the total strength of functional/ promoter directors to nine.

Against this, the company, at present, has four independent directors and needed five more to meet Sebi’s listing norm of having equal number of executive and non-executive directors.

However, since ONGC is without a permanent chairman and vacancy of director for human resources has not been filled, the effective strength of full-time functional directors together with government-nominee directors was down to seven.

To meet the Sebi norm, three independent directors need to be appointed, which given the timelines, is not possible.

So, the government plans to withdraw its two nominee directors, bringing down the strength of functional directors to five. File pertaining to appointment of one independent director is already with the Cabinet Committee on Appointments and once that is cleared, ONGC would meet the Sebi norm, he said.

ONGC last month received the report of independent auditors who certified the company’s oil and gas reserves, a mandatory requirement for explorers making public offers.

A group of ministers headed by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee would decide on a price band for the FPO on April 1.

Bank of America Corp, Nomura Holdings, HSBC Holdings Plc, JM Financial Services, Citigroup Inc and Morgan Stanley are managing the FPO.

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First Published: Mar 04 2011 | 12:39 AM IST

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