The plan to revive the Delhi Stock Exchange got a shot in the arm today with the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) giving its nod to six foreign investment proposals. |
The proposals will have a total 26 per cent stake in the bourse for Rs 100 crore. |
The six foreign investors are "" Wilmette Holdings Ltd, Mauritius (5 per cent), Kuwait-based Noor Financial Investment Company (5 per cent), Passport India Investments, Mauritius (5 per cent), Ikarus Petroleum of Kuwait ( 5 per cent), Kuwait Privatisation Projects Ltd (5 per cent) and NRI Bhupendra Kumar Modi (1 per cent), DSE sources said. |
As the maximum foreign investment in a stock exchange is now capped at 26 per cent, the bourse will have to sell 25 per cent stake to minimum five domestic investors. |
The exchange is looking for 11 investors to dilute 51 per cent stake, in line with the Securities and Exchange Board of India's (Sebi) demutualisation scheme, before August-end. |
According to the Sebi norms, each single investor can buy a maximum of 5 per cent stake in a stock exchange. The bourse has submitted a list of foreign and domestic investors to Sebi for its approval. |
Domestic firms like Financial Technologies, Parsvnath Developers Ltd, Rajasthan Global Capital and Bennett, Coleman & Co are some of the front-runners to buy stakes in the bourse. |
The DSE, defunct for the last three years, is also in talks several domestic banks and institutional investors. The enterprise value of the DSE is pegged at Rs 400 crore-500 crore and the 51 per cent stake is likely to fetch Rs 200 crore-250 crore to the member brokers, who will divest their stake. |
The daily turnover of the DSE, where about 3,000 companies are listed, was around Rs 375 crore in 2000-01. The bourse recently increased its paid-up capital to Rs 3.03 crore to enable the company to list on the Bombay Stock Exchange at a future date. |