Business Standard

FPOs fail to boost liquidity in PSU counters

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Mehul Shah Mumbai

Follow-on public offerings (FPOs) have failed to improve trading volume in three of the four state-run companies that came out with their issues this year, due to lower-than-expected financial performance and concentrated shareholding.

Ideally, trading volume should improve after an FPO, due to availability of more numbers of shares. However, average trading volume in NTPC, NMDC and Engineers India has come down, show data compiled by the Business Standard Research Bureau for the six months prior to the listing of FPO shares and the period after.

According to Deven Choksey, managing director of KR Choksey Shares and Securities, NTPC, NMDC and Engineers India have not met street expectations in financial performance. “They are short on delivering what they had promised. This could be one reason behind lower average trading volume in these counters post FPO,” he said.

 

NTPC and NMDC have seen drops of 31 per cent each in average trading volume after the FPO availability. In case of Engineers India, average trading volume declined about 20 per cent. Only Rural Electification Corporation has seen a rise, of 26 per cent, in average trading volume after the FPO.
 

AVERAGE TRADING VOLUME*
 List of
Date
Six month before
FPO listing
After listing,
till Date
NTPC Feb 26, 201043478862982564
Rural Elect Corp Mar 8, 201016233942056560
NMDC Mar 29, 201015503411069049
Engineers India Aug 12, 2010903905723467
* Comibine Shares on BSE & NSE                 Compiled by BS Research Bureau

“Poor stock performance and concentrated holding are the key reasons behind lack of trading interest in case of NTPC and NMDC,” said Jagannadham Thunuguntla, equity head at SMC Capitals. The shares of NTPC and NMDC are trading well below their FPO prices of Rs 201 and Rs 300, respectively. NTPC closed at Rs 178.10 today on the National Stock Exchange, while NMDC ended at Rs 256.50.

The Union government owns 84.5 per cent in NTPC, while Life Insurance Corporation (LIC) has a 3.53 per cent stake.

In NMDC, the government owns 90 per cent in the iron ore producer, while LIC owns 4.97 per cent.

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First Published: Nov 25 2010 | 12:06 AM IST

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