Country's largest lender SBI today said it has raised Rs 15,000 crore by selling 52.2 crore shares through qualified institutional placement (QIP), the largest share sale in the secondary market by a bank.
SBI had opened the share sale through private placement on June 5.
In a regulatory filing, the bank said its central board decided to close the issue today and has accorded its consent for the issue of approximately 52.2 crore shares at a price of Rs 287.25 for an aggregate value of about Rs 15,000 crore.
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In February 2015, HDFC Bank had raised Rs 9,880 crore from share sale in the secondary market by a private entity to overseas and domestic investors through a mix of qualified institutional placement and American depository shares.
Raising funds from the market will ease the pressure on the exchequer of pumping in capital in the state-owned bank.
As per the Indradhanush plan, public sector banks need to raise Rs 1.10 lakh crore from markets, including follow-on public offer, to meet Basel-III requirements, which will kick in from March 2019.
In 2014, SBI raised Rs 8,032 crore by selling shares through qualified institutional placement (QIP), largely aided by the state-owned life insurer LIC.
Earlier in the day, ratings agency Moody's had said stressed assets of Indian banks will increase through 2019 and capitalisation will remain a key credit weakness for state- owned lenders which will need up to Rs 95,000 crore additional capital over the next two years.
SBI's stock closed at Rs 288.80 on the BSE, down 0.67 per cent.
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