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INDIAN IPO MARKET

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Page 1: Indian IPO Market

INDIAN IPO

MARKET

Page 2: Indian IPO Market

HISTORY

The term initial public offering (IPO) slipped into everyday speech during the tech bull

market of the late 1990s. Back then, it seemed you couldn't go a day without hearing about a

dozen new dotcom millionaires in Silicon Valley who were cashing in on their latest IPO. The

phenomenon spawned the term siliconaire, which described the dotcom entrepreneurs in

their early 20s and 30s who suddenly found themselves living large on the proceeds from

their internet companies' IPOs.

INVESTORS are still wary of equities in the 1990s, to blame are the excesses in the primary

market in the 1990s. Of the thousands of IPOs (initial public offerings) and offers for sale

made between 1994 and 1996, less than a hundred were from companies with track record.

Even in this shortlist, only a few managed to complete planned projects and deliver value to

investors. The rest just frittered the money away.

The primary market of the mid-1990s was merely used as a channel to move public funds into

private hands. The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) was late to wake up to the

excesses, but when it did, it improved the disclosure framework, tightened the prerequisites

for an IPO, and towards the end of the decade, introduced book-building.

( This route brought to market quality, wealth-creating IPOs such as Hughes Software, i-flex

solutions, Maruti, Bharti Tele-Ventures, TV Today and Divi's Labs, to name a few. Yet the

corporate sector has still not fully lived down the consequences of the excesses of the mid-

1990s.)

Page 3: Indian IPO Market

BRIEF INTORDUCTION ON CURRENT POSITION OF INDIAN IPO MARKET

• India is being lauded as the savior of the ailing global IPO market with $3.3 billion

worth of proceeds from eight deals. This makes India the largest IPO market in the

world so far this year.

• According to Thomson Financial, the bulk of the volumes came from the biggest IPO

deal so far this year — Reliance Power's $3 billion IPO on January 21, 2008.

• On January 15, 2008, Reliance Power attracted $27.5 billion of bids on the first day

of its IPO, equivalent to 10.5 times the stock on offer, thereby, creating India's IPO

record. Its upper cut off price was Rs. 450. The proposed IPO was to fund the

development of its six power projects across the country.

• Emaar MGF’s IPO, at $1.6 billion is estimated to be the second largest IPO in the

world so far this year, behind Reliance Power's $3 billion IPO.

• Thomson Financial data reveals that India accounts for 49.1% of global IPO

proceeds at the moment, compared to just 3.7% same time last year. Significant, given

that global IPOs declined 36.1% over the last one year.

• The Indian capital market has performed quite well in 2007. It raised US$8.3 billion

through 95 Initial Public Offers (IPOs). According to the Ernst & Young report,

"Globalisation - Global IPO Trend Report 2007" India was the fifth largest market in

Page 4: Indian IPO Market

the world in terms of the number of IPOs and the seventh largest in terms of the

proceeds for the year

• It was the real estate sector which took the maximum advantage of the bullish stock

market trends in 2007. According to the industry body Assocham, real estate players

raised the maximum amount of funds from the capital market through IPOs last year.

Realty firms picked up around 42.7% of the total funds generated through IPOs. Of

the Rs.34,119 crore raised in the primary market in the period starting from January

1, 2007 to mid-December, about Rs.14,591 crore was raised by the realty firms.

WHAT IS AN IPO?

• An initial public offering (IPO) is the first sale of stock by a company to the public

• An initial public offering (IPO) occurs when a company first sells common shares to

investors in the public. Generally, the company offers primary shares this way,

although sometimes secondary shares are also sold as IPOs.

• Broadly speaking, companies are either private or public. Going public means a

company is switching from private ownership to public ownership.

FINANCIAL YEAR AMOUNT RAISED THROUHG IPO

2002-03 Rs 1039 crore

2003-04 Rs 17807 crore

2004-05 Rs 21432 crore

2005-06 Rs 23,676 crore

2006-07 Rs 24,994 crore

2007-08 Rs 52,253 crore

Page 5: Indian IPO Market

• Going public raises cash and provides many benefits for a company.

WHAT IS PRIMARY MARKET AND WHAT IS SECONDARY MARKET?

When shares are bought in an IPO it is termed primary market. The primary market does not

involve the stock exchanges. A company that plans an IPO contacts an investment banker

who will in turn called on securities dealers to help sell the new stock issue.

This process of selling the new stock issues to prospective investors in the primary market is

called underwriting.

When an investor buys shares from another investor at an agreed prevailing market price, it

is called as buying from the secondary market.

The secondary market involves the stock exchanges and it is regulated by a regulatory

authority. In India, the secondary and primary markets are governed by the Security and

Exchange Board of India (SEBI).

Kinds of public offerings

Primary offering – new shares are sold to raise cash for the company

Secondary offering – existing shares (owned by VCs or firm founders) are sold, no new cash

goes to company.A single offering may include both of these initial public offering.

Page 6: Indian IPO Market

Some benefits/motivations:

- Additional source of capital

- Increase debt capacity (give “breathing room” for debt)

- Stock prices give measure of performance

- Allows managers to be compensated with options, or have incentives otherwise

directly tied to shareholder value

- Potentially more information about firm (analyst following), makes borrowing

cheaper.

-

Understanding “Issues”

This portion tries to cover the basic concepts and questions related to issues (issues in the

meaning of issuance of securities). The aim is towards understanding the various types of

issues, eligibility norms, exemptions from the same. The disclosure requirements regarding

the issuance of securities are covered in detail in the SEBI (Disclosure and Investor

Protection) Guidelines, 2000.

KINDS OF ISSUES

Page 7: Indian IPO Market

Primarily, issues can be classified as a Public, Rights or preferential issues (also known as

private placements). While public and rights issues involve a detailed procedure, private

placements or preferential issues are relatively simpler. The classification of issues is

illustrated below:

Public issues can be further classified into Initial Public offerings and further public

offerings. In a public offering, the issuer makes an offer for new investors to enter its

Page 8: Indian IPO Market

shareholding family. The issuer company makes detailed disclosures as per the DIP

guidelines in its offer document and offers it for subscription. The significant features are

illustrated below:

Initial Public Offering (IPO)

It is when an unlisted company makes either a fresh issue of securities or an offer for sale of

its existing securities or both for the first time to the public. This paves way for listing and

trading of the issuer’s securities.

Further public offering (FPO)

It is when an already listed company makes either a fresh issue of securities to the public or

an offer for sale to the public, through an offer document. An offer for sale in such scenario is

allowed only if it is made to satisfy listing or continuous listing obligations.

Rights Issue (RI)

It is when a listed company which proposes to issue fresh securities to its existing

shareholders as on a record date. The rights are normally offered in a particular ratio to the

number of securities held prior to the issue. This route is best suited for companies who

would like to raise capital without diluting stake of its existing shareholders unless they do

not intend to subscribe to their entitlements.

Private placement

It is an issue of shares or of convertible securities by a company to a select group of persons

under Section 81 of the Companies Act, 1956 which is neither a rights issue nor a public

issue. This is a faster way for a company to raise equity capital. A private placement of

shares or of convertible securities by a listed company is generally known by name of

preferential allotment. A listed company going for preferential allotment has to comply with

the requirements contained in Chapter XIII of SEBI (DIP) Guidelines pertaining to

Page 9: Indian IPO Market

preferential allotment in SEBI (DIP) guidelines include pricing, disclosures in notice etc, in

addition to the requirements specified in the Companies Act.

Free-pricing abused

As controls over pricing of equity were abolished in 1992, prudence took a backseat as

companies set about raising funds at fancy prices; the pricing was justified with helpful

projections of profitability dished out even by ICICI, IDBI, IFCI, Kotak Mahindra and Enam

Securities, leave alone the plethora of lesser-known investment banking outfits. The earnings

projections were vastly out of tune with reality. There was no element of the risk of business

cycle built into them; in many cases, it appeared as if the price had been fixed, and the

revenue and earnings numbers generated to justify it.

That the IDBI's stock traded at the offer price for just a couple of days over an eight-year

period and, subsequently, well below that price, tells the tale of abuse of free-pricing. Not

surprisingly, this put investors off; they had patronised such IPOs in a big way as the first

few offers in the free-pricing mode — of IFCI, Bank of Baroda, Infosys and Satyam Computer

— delivered value. Corporate greed was penalised, as investor apathy ensured that between

1998 and 2001, the number of IPOs/offers for sale could be counted on the fingers of one

hand.

.

A colossal misconception

This period was also witness to a popular notion that equity was the cheapest source of the

funding, as the premium element was perceived as carrying no cost. What companies failed

to recognise in this process — they were also encouraged by investment banks seeking more

IPO opportunities — was that their capital cost could only be the same as the investor's

expected rate return.

By assuming and assigning a zero-cost to the premium element, companies converted what is,

inarguably, the most expensive source of finance to the cheapest one. This led to an overhang

on equity across Corporate India, with funds being mobilised in the domestic and global

Page 10: Indian IPO Market

markets through the issuance of global depository receipts. As this understanding of the cost

was not clued to reality, it soon fell apart.

Capacity overhang

The primary market boom of the mid-1990s also ensured excess of a different kind: A fad for

capacity creation across a range of commodities, with the possible exception of aluminium

and copper. Cement and steel were good examples. Buoyed by high cement and steel prices,

and expectations of consistent double-digit growth in demand that was attributed to

liberalisation of the economy, several firms set up cement and steel capacities.

Binani Zinc, Sanghi Polesyter and the Rajan Raheja group and the DLF group (both cited

backward integration to construction as the reason for their cement foray) set up large-sized

cement units. Jindal Vijayanagar, Essar Steel, Bhushan Steel, Ispat Industries and Lloyds

Steel completed the steel story. The effect of the overcapacity still exerts pressure on

profitability. For instance, in cement, a better balance between demand and supply is

expected only two years from now.

This binge effectively ensured that even in the small number of companies where projects

were implemented — without exception marked by time and cost-overrun — investors have

had nothing to show by way of wealth accretion. Only the IPOs of the past two-and-half

years have changed that. If the ongoing bullish phase is used to perpetrate excesses, the

consequences would not be any different. Corporate India needs to walk a different path now,

both for its sake as well as in the interest of investors.

Qualified Institutions Placement

It is a private placement of equity shares or securities convertible in to equity shares by a

listed company to Qualified Institutions Buyers only in terms of provisions of Chapter XIIIA

of SEBI (DIP) guidelines. The Chapter contains provisions relating to pricing, disclosures,

currency of instruments etc.

Page 11: Indian IPO Market

IPO GRADING

IPO grading is the grade assigned by a Credit Rating Agency registered with SEBI, to the

initial public offering (IPO) of equity shares or any other security which may be converted

into or exchanged with equity shares at a later date. The grade represents a relative

assessment of the fundamentals of that issue in relation to the other listed equity securities in

India. Such grading is generally assigned on a five-point point scale with a higher score

indicating stronger fundamentals and vice versa as below.

 

IPO grade 1: Poor fundamentals

IPO grade 2: Below-average fundamentals

IPO grade 3: Average fundamentals

IPO grade 4: Above-average fundamentals

IPO grade 5: Strong fundamentals

IPO grading has been introduced as an endeavor to make additional information available

for the investors in order to facilitate their assessment of equity issues offered through an

IPO. 

- IPO grading can be done either before filing the draft offer documents

with SEBI or thereafter. However, the Prospectus/Red Herring Prospectus, as the case may

be, must contain the grade/s given to the IPO by all CRAs approached by the company for

grading such IPO.

- Further information regarding the grading process may be obtained

from the Credit Rating Agencies.

Page 12: Indian IPO Market

- The company desirous of making the IPO is required to bear the

expenses incurred for grading such IPO.

- A company which has filed the draft offer document for its IPO with

SEBI, on or after 1st May, 2007, is required to obtain a grade for the IPO from at least one

CRA.

- IPO grade/s cannot be rejected. Irrespective of whether the issuer

finds the grade given by the rating agency acceptable or not, the grade has to be disclosed as

required under the DIP Guidelines.

- However the issuer has the option of opting for another grading by a

different agency. In such an event all grades obtained for the IPO will have to be disclosed in

the offer documents, advertisements etc.

- IPO grading is intended to run parallel to the filing of offer document

with SEBI and the consequent issuance of observations. Since issuance of observation by

SEBI and the grading process, function independently, IPO grading is not expected to delay

the issue process.

- The IPO grading process is expected to take into account the prospects

of the industry in which the company operates, the competitive strengths of the company that

would allow it to address the risks inherent in the business(es) and capitalise on the

opportunities available, as well as the company’s financial position.

- While the actual factors considered for grading may not be identical or

limited to the following, the areas listed below are generally looked into by the rating

agencies, while arriving at an IPO grad 

    Business Prospects and Competitive Position

         i.      Industry Prospects

        ii.      Company Prospects

    Financial Position

    Management Quality

Page 13: Indian IPO Market

    Corporate Governance Practices

    Compliance and Litigation History

    New Projects—Risks and Prospects

 

It may be noted that the above is only indicative of some of the factors considered in the IPO

grading process and may vary on a case to case basis.

- IPO grading is done without taking into account the price at which the

security is offered in the IPO. Since IPO grading does not consider the issue price, the

investor needs to make an independent judgment regarding the price at which to bid

for/subscribe to the shares offered through the IPO.

- All grades obtained for the IPO along with a description of the grades

can be found in the Prospectus. Abridged Prospectus, issue advertisement or any other

place where the issuer company is making advertisement for its issue. Further the Grading

letter of the Credit Rating Agency which contains the detailed rationale for assigning the

particular grade will be included among the Material Documents available for Inspection.

- An IPO grade is NOT a suggestion or recommendation as to whether

one should subscribe to the IPO or not. IPO grade needs to be read together with the

disclosures made in the prospectus including the risk factors as well as the price at which

the shares are offered in the issue.

- The grades are allocated on a 5-point scale, the lowest being Grade 1

and highest Grade

- IPO Grading is intended to provide the investor with an informed and

objective opinion expressed by a professional rating agency after analyzing factors like

business and financial prospects, management quality and corporate governance practices

etc. However, irrespective of the grade obtained by the issuer, the investor needs to make

Page 14: Indian IPO Market

his/her own independent decision regarding investing in any issue after studying the

contents of the prospectus including risk factors carefully.

- SEBI does not play any role in the assessment made by the grading

agency. The grading is intended to be an independent and unbiased opinion of that agency.

- The grading is intended to be an independent and unbiased opinion of

a rating agency. SEBI does not pass any judgment on the quality of the issuer company.

SEBI’s observations on the IPO document are entirely independent of the IPO grading

process or the grades received by the company.

Rating IPO

POWERFUL GUIDANCE TOOL

SEBI's proposal to make the IPO assessment available to investors is a step in the right

direction.

Though the move to make IPO assessment mandatory has drawn some critical comments, the

need for a tool to help investors make better-informed decisions and judge the quality of

issues hitting the market is undisputed.

An IPO assessment brings four major pluses.

Firstly, it improves information content through a professional and independent

assessment.

Secondly, it is relief for individual investors from information overload.

Thirdly, it provides disincentives for weak companies to come to the market in the

hope of raising easy capital.

And fourthly, it brings about greater level of investor sophistication.

Page 15: Indian IPO Market

 

ARRANGING AN IPO

1. Select Underwriter

- Provides procedural, financial advice

- Ultimately buys issue from company (at “issue price”)

- Ultimately sells it to public (at “offer price”)

2. Prepare Registration Statement – for approval of SEC (in accord with Securities Act

of 1933). Formal summary that provides information on an issue of securities.

3. Prepare Prospectus – Streamlined version of registration statement, for consideration

by potential investors.

4. Set price

Road show – Talks organized to introduce company to potential investors, before the

IPO.

Bookbuilding –“Book Building” means a process undertaken by which a demand for the securities

proposed to be issued by a body corporate is elicited and built up and the price for

such securities is assessed for the determination of the quantum of such securities to

be issued by means of a notice, circular, advertisement, document or information

memoranda or offer document.

Page 16: Indian IPO Market

5. Selling the shares

Best efforts offering

IPO method in which underwriter promises to sell as much as possible, give best

effort, not commit to selling all of issue.

Firm commitment offering : Method in which underwriter buys the whole issue, bears

all risk.

Syndicate : Group of underwriters formed to sell a particular issue

Spread - Difference between public “offer price” and price paid by underwriter

(“issue price”). Biggest part of underwriter compensation.

PROCEDURE OF SALE OF IPO’S

IPOs generally involve one or more investment banks as "underwriters." The company

offering its shares, called the "issuer," enters a contract with a lead underwriter to sell its

shares to the public. The underwriter then approaches investors with offers to sell these

shares.

The sale (that is, the allocation and pricing) of shares in an IPO may take several forms.

Common methods include:

Dutch auction

Firm commitment

Best efforts

Bought deal

Self Distribution of Stock

Page 17: Indian IPO Market

A large IPO is usually underwritten by a "syndicate" of investment banks led by one or more

major investment banks (lead underwriter). Upon selling the shares, the underwriters keep a

commission based on a percentage of the value of the shares sold. Usually, the lead

underwriters, i.e. the underwriters selling the largest proportions of the IPO, take the highest

commissions—up to 8% in some cases.

Multinational IPOs may have as many as three syndicates to deal with differing legal

requirements in both the issuer's domestic market and other regions. For example, an issuer

based in the E.U. may be represented by the main selling syndicate in its domestic market,

Europe, in addition to separate syndicates or selling groups for US/Canada and for Asia.

Usually, the lead underwriter in the main selling group is also the lead bank in the other

selling groups.

Because of the wide array of legal requirements, IPOs typically involve one or more law

firms with major practices in securities law, such as the Magic Circle firms of London and

the white shoe firms of New York City.

Usually, the offering will include the issuance of new shares, intended to raise new capital, as

well the secondary sale of existing shares. However, certain regulatory restrictions and

restrictions imposed by the lead underwriter are often placed on the sale of existing shares.

Public offerings are primarily sold to institutional investors, but some shares are also

allocated to the underwriters' retail investors. A broker selling shares of a public offering to

his clients is paid through a sales credit instead of a commission. The client pays no

commission to purchase the shares of a public offering; the purchase price simply includes

the built-in sales credit.

The issuer usually allows the underwriters an option to increase the size of the offering by up

to 15% under certain circumstance known as the greenshoe or overallotment option.

Three basic IPO costs

1. Administrative costs: for preparing registration, legal counsel, preparing and

printing prospectus, etc.

Page 18: Indian IPO Market

2. Spread: Difference between public “offer price” and price paid by underwriter

(“issue price”).

3. Underpricing: Difference between what stock is offered at and what it’s really worth

Can be measured, roughly, as end-of-first-trading-day price minus

offer price

A hidden cost, but usually the biggest cost!

Public issues after the IPO

Seasoned Offering (SEO) – An equity issue by a firm after its IPO

General Cash Offer - Sale of securities open to all investors by an already public company.

Used for virtually all U.S. equity and debt issues

Shelf Registration – A procedure created by SEC “Rule 415” that allows firms to file one

registration statement for several issues of the same security.

- Covers financing plans up to 2 years ahead

- Speeds up issue process; don’t have to issue all at once

- Usually used for relatively “garden variety” issues, not complex issues where

underwriter’s “stamp of approval” may have value.

Deepak Parekh to head SEBI panel on primary

market

Page 19: Indian IPO Market

- THE Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has reconstituted its Primary

Market Advisory Committee (PMAC), which advises the regulator on policy matters

pertaining to the development of the primary market. With investor protection high on

its agenda, SEBI has asked its reconstituted PMAC to advise it on the matters relating

to regulation of intermediaries for ensuring investor protection in the primary market.

The terms of reference of the reconstituted 18-member committee include advising

SEBI on issues related to regulation and development of primary market. It would

also advise SEBI on changes in legal framework to introduce simplification and

transparency in systems and procedures in the primary market.

- The committee will be chaired by Mr Deepak S Parekh, Chairman, HDFC.

Case study

PKO BANK POLSKI IPO

Issuer PKO Bank Polski

Page 20: Indian IPO Market

Seller The State Treasury of Poland, retain 52%

Pricing Date 3 November 2004

First Trading Date 10 November 2004

Shares Offered 377 million shares, all secondary

Reverse Greenshoe Reverse Greenshoe option covering 6.5% of Offering

(all secondary)

Price Range

Offer Price

PLN 17.5-20.5 per share

PLN 20.5 per share

Offer Size PLN 7.6 billion (US$ 2.3 billion)

Pre Offer Post Offer

Shareholders Polish Treasury 100.0% 52%

Employees 0.0 10%

Free Float 0.0 38%

Tranche Sizes Polish retail: 42%

Polish institutions: 35%

International institutions: 23%

Listing Warsaw Stock Exchange (No GDRs)

Future Capital Holdings- case study

Page 21: Indian IPO Market

The price band for Future Capital Holdings' (FCH) IPO was fixed at Rs.700-765. The IPO

launched in mid-January. The Future Capital IPO is expected to mop up nearly Rs.490

crore from the market. The subscription for the issue began on January 11 and closed on

January 16. The Future Capital Holdings offered 10.16% of its equity through the IPO.

FCH had filed the red herring prospect with the Securities and Exchange Board of India

(SEBI) in September 2007, and had received the regulator's approval in January 2008.

Currently the promoters' holding in the company is around 83 %. After the issue the

promoters' stake in the company is expected to come down to 74.5 %. In fact, Pantaloon

Retail's 61 per cent holding in Future Capital will come down to 55 per cent

DLF launches India's biggest IPO

Real estate developer DLF Ltd. which is relaunching, June 11, an initial public share offer to

raise up to Rs. 9625 crore (approx. $2.4 billion), has fixed a price band of Rs. 500-550 per

share.

During the issue that will remain open for public subscription from June 11 to June 14, DLF

will offer 175 million equity shares of Rs. 2 each through 100 percent book-build route. The

post-issue dilution would be over 10.27 percent. At Rs. 550 per share, its market cap would

rise to Rs. 93,720 crore (approx. $23 billion), making it among the top ten listed firms in the

country above India's top private bank ICICI Bank, valued at $20.6 billion; Wipro Ltd., $19.5

billion; and top lender State Bank of India, $17.1 billion.

DLF's public issue would be the largest IPO. The ONGC issue, in which government had

raised around Rs. 10,500 crore (approx. $2.6 billion) was an offer for sale. DLF, according

to AC Nelson report, is the largest real estate development company in India in terms of

residential, commercial and retail area developed. It has persence in all verticals of real

estate including Special Economic Zones (SEZs). It has currently 46 million sq ft under

development in various projects and a massive land bank of over 10,200 acre.

Advanta India IPO

Page 22: Indian IPO Market

Announcement / Companies & Industry April 03, 2007

MUMBAI, April 3, 2007: Advanta India Limited (the “Company”), an international

agronomic seed company with principal operations in India, Australia, Thailand and

Argentina, and a subsidiary of United Phosphorus Limited, has fixed the Issue Price for its

initial public offering of 3,380,000 Equity Shares of Rs 10 for cash at a premium that was

decided through the 100% Book-Building Process at Rs 640 per equity share (the “Issue”).

The Price Band for the Issue was fixed between Rs 600 and Rs 650 per equity share.

 The subscription to the Issue closed on March 30, 2007, and the Issue was subscribed 3.98

times. The Issue received good response from Qualified Institutional Buyers (“QIB”) and the

QIB portion was subscribed 6.47 times withover 1.31 crore shares bid against reserve

portion of 20.28 lakh shares.

 

The shares are proposed to be listed on the National Stock Exchange and the Bombay Stock

Exchange Limited.

 

Headquartered in Bangalore, Advanta India Limited is a subsidiary of United Phosphorus

Ltd., one of the leading generic agrochemical companies in the world with operations in the

United States, Australia, China, Latin America and Europe. The Company, including its

operating subsidiaries, is engaged in the research, production and sales of a range of hybrid

seeds for cereals and oilseed crops. It is a global leader in technical plant breeding and in

the application of biotechnology to develop new hybrids and varieties of field crops and

broad acre vegetable seed products.

 

The Book Running Lead Managers to the Issue are YES Bank Limited, UBS Securities India

Private Limited and SSKI Corporate Finance Private Limited.

Page 23: Indian IPO Market

Avon Weighing Systems IPO

June 16th, 2008 — IPO, IPO Subscription

Avon Weighing Systems IPO received an overwhelming response from the investors as the

issue was subscribed by over 45 times. This is after a long time that a fixed price Public

issue has hit the markets and people have shown good interest by oversubscribing the issue

by 44 times. Avon Weighing IPO subscription started on 9th June, 2007 with a public issue

over 1.37 crore equity shares priced at Rs. 10 each closed today for subscription.

Avon Weighing IPO is proposed to be listed on the BSE and the Book Running Lead Manager

to the issue is Keynote Corporate Services. Datamatics Financial Services Limited is the

Registrar to the issue.

Reliance Power Limited

Type Public company

Founded 2007

Headquarters Mumbai, India

Key people Anil Ambani, Founder and Chairman

Industry Electricity generation

Website http://www.reliancepower.co.in/

Reliance Power Limited, a part of the Reliance Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group, was

established to develop, construct and operate power projects in the domestic and

international markets. Reliance Energy Limited, an Indian private sector power utility

company along with the Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group promotes Reliance Power.

Along with its subsidiaries, it is presently developing 13 medium and large-sized power

projects with a combined planned installed capacity of 28,200

Page 24: Indian IPO Market

Initial public offering and controversies

On January 15, 2008, the company attracted $27.5 billion of bids on the first day of its initial

public offering (IPO), equivalent to 10.5 times the stock on offer, thereby, creating India's

IPO record. The upper cut off price for the bid was Rs. 450. The proposed IPO was to fund

the development of its six power projects across the country whose completion dates are

scheduled from December 2009 to March 2014.

A media report suggested that, if the company’s stock price were to cross Rs. 650-700, Anil

Ambani would go past L. N. Mittal to become the richest Indian. "It is a reflection of world

community in the future of India... Investors seem to be confident in the future of Indian

economy," Indian Finance Minister, P. Chidambaram told the media about the IPO.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India, which is an organization that regulates the

activity in the Indian stock market, placed some restrictions based on a complaint about the

formulation of the IPO. The complaint also resulted in a public interest litigation being filed

against the company. However, the Supreme Court of India passed a ruling that the IPO

would go ahead even if any order is passed by any Indian court against the venture.

Reliance Power debuted on the stock markets on February 11, 2008. However, the markets

were still reeling after the January 2008 stock market volatility, and concerns over

speculation that the issue was overpriced sent the stock plummeting soon after its listing. At

markets. Reliance Energy Limited, an Indian private sector power utility company along with

the Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group promotes Reliance Power.

Along with its subsidiaries, it is presently developing 13 medium and large-sized power

projects with a combined planned installed capacity of 28,200.

SOME TERMS IN IPO INDUSTRY

Page 25: Indian IPO Market

Offer document

Means Prospectus in case of a public issue or offer for sale and Letter of Offer in case of a

rights issue which is filed Registrar of Companies (ROC) and Stock Exchanges. An offer

document covers all the relevant information to help an investor to make his/her investment

decision.

Draft Offer document

Means the offer document in draft stage. The draft offer documents are filed with SEBI,

atleast 21 days prior to the filing of the Offer Document with ROC/ SEs. SEBI may specifies

changes, if any, in the draft Offer Document and the issuer or the Lead Merchant banker

shall carry out such changes in the draft offer document before filing the Offer Document

with ROC/SEs. The Draft Offer document is available on the SEBI website for public

comments for a period of 21 days from the filing of the Draft Offer Document with

SEBI.

Red Herring Prospectus

It is a prospectus which does not have details of either price or number of shares being

offered or the amount of issue. This means that in case price is not disclosed, the number of

shares and the upper and lower price bands are disclosed. On the other hand, an issuer can

state the issue size and the number of shares are determined later. An RHP for and FPO can

be filed with the ROC without the price band and the issuer, in such a case will notify the

floor price or a price band by way of an advertisement one day prior to the opening of the

issue. In the case of book-built issues, it is a process of price discovery and the price cannot

be determined until the bidding process is completed. Hence, such details are not shown in

the Red Herring prospectus filed with ROC in terms of the provisions of the Companies Act.

Only on completion of the bidding process, the details of the final price are included in the

offer document. The offer document filed thereafter with ROC is called a prospectus.

Abridged Prospectus

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Means the memorandum as prescribed in Form 2A under sub-section (3) of section 56 of the

Companies Act, 1956. It contains all the salient features of a prospectus. It accompanies the

application form of public issues.

Letter of offer

Means the offer document prepared by company for its rights issue and which is filed with the

Stock Exchanges. The letter of offer contains all the disclosures as required in term of

SEBI(DIP) guidelines and enable shareholder in making an informed decision.

Abridged letter of offer

Means the abridged version of the letter of offer. Listed company is required to send the

abridged letter of offer to each and every shareholder who is eligible for participating in the

rights issue along with the application form. A company is also required to send detailed

letter of offer upon request by any Shareholder.

Placement Document

Means document prepared by Merchant Banker for the purpose of Qualified Institutions

placement and contains all the relevant and material disclosures to enable QIBs to make an

informed decision

.

Lock-in

“Lock-in” indicates a freeze on the shares. SEBI (DIP) Guidelines have stipulated lock-in

requirements on shares of promoters mainly to ensure that the promoters or main persons

who are controlling the company, shall continue to hold some minimum percentage in the

company after the public issue. The requirements are detailed in Chapter IV of DIP

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guidelines. There is lock-in on the shares held before IPO and also on shares acquired

through preferential allotment route. However there is no lock- in on shares/ securities

allotted through QIP route. The requirements are detailed in Chapter IV, Chapter XIII and

Chapter XIIIA of DIP guidelines.

Promoter

The promoter has been defined as a person or persons who are in over-all control of the

company, who are instrumental in the formulation of a plan or programme pursuant to which

the securities are offered to the public and those named in the prospectus as promoters(s). It

may be noted that a director / officer of the issuer company or person, if they are acting as

such merely in their professional capacity are not be included in the definition of a promoter.

'Promoter Group' includes the promoter, an immediate relative of the promoter (i.e. any

spouse of that person, or any parent, brother, sister or child of the person or of the spouse).

In case promoter is a company, a subsidiary or holding company of that company; any

company in which the promoter holds 10% or more of the equity capital or which holds 10%

or more of the equity capital of the Promoter; any company in which a group of individuals

or companies or combinations thereof who holds 20% or more of the equity capital in that

company also holds 20% or more of the equity capital of the issuer company. In case the

promoter is an individual, any company in which 10% or more of the share capital is held by

the promoter or an immediate relative of the promoter' or a firm or HUF in which the

'Promoter' or any one or more of his immediate relative is a member; any company in which

a company specified in, holds 10% or more, of the share capital; any HUF or firm in which

the aggregate share of the promoter and his immediate relatives is equal to or more than

10% of the total, and all persons whose shareholding is aggregated for the purpose of

disclosing in the prospectus "shareholding of the promoter group".

Green-shoe Option

A Green Shoe option means an option of allocating shares in excess of the shares included in

the public issue and operating a post-listing price stabilizing mechanism for a period not

exceeding 30 days in accordance with the provisions of Chapter VIIIA of DIP Guidelines,

which is granted to a company to be exercised through a Stabilizing Agent. This is an

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arrangement wherein the issue would be over allotted to the extent of a maximum of 15% of

the issue size. From an investor’s perspective, an issue with green shoe option provides more

probability of getting shares and also that post listing price may show relatively more

stability as compared to market.

E-IPO

A company proposing to issue capital to public through the on-line system of the stock

exchange for offer of securities can do so if it complies with the requirements under Chapter

11A of DIP Guidelines. The appointment of various intermediaries by the issuer includes a

prerequisite that such members/registrars have the required facilities to accommodate such

an online issue process.

Safety Net

Any safety net scheme or buy-back arrangements of the shares proposed in any public issue

shall be finalized by an issuer company with the lead merchant banker in advance and

disclosed in the prospectus. Such buy back or safety net arrangements shall be made

available only to all original resident individual allottees limited up to a maximum of 1000

shares per allottee and the offer is kept open for a period of 6 months from the last date of

dispatch of securities. The details regarding Safety Net are covered under Clause 8.18 of DIP

Guidelines

.

Syndicate Member

The Book Runner(s) may appoint those intermediaries who are registered with the Board and

who are permitted to carry on activity as an ‘Underwriter’ as syndicate members. The

syndicate members are mainly appointed to collect and entre the bid forms in a book built

issue.

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Flipping

Flipping is reselling a hot IPO stock in the first few days to earn a quick profit. This isn't easy

to do, and you'll be strongly discouraged by your brokerage. The reason behind this is that

companies want long-term investors who hold their stock, not traders. There are no laws that

prevent flipping, but your broker may blacklist you from future offerings

Institutional investors flip stocks all the time and make big money. The double standard exists

and there is nothing we can do about it because they have the buying power. Because of

flipping, it's a good rule not to buy shares of an IPO if you don't get in on the initial offering.

Many IPOs that have big gains on the first day will come back to earth as the institutions take

their profits.

Open book/closed book

Presently, in issues made through book building, Issuers and merchant bankers are required

to ensure online display of the demand and bids during the bidding period. This is the Open

book system of book building. Here, the investor can be guided by the movements of the bids

during the period in which the bid is kept open. Under closed book building, the book is not

made public and the bidders will have to take a call on the price at which they intend to make

a bid without having any information on the bids submitted by other bidders.

Hard underwriting

Hard underwriting is when an underwriter agrees to buy his commitment at its earliest stage.

The underwriter guarantees a fixed amount to the issuer from the issue. Thus, in case the

shares are not subscribed by investors, the issue is devolved on underwriters and they have to

bring in the amount by subscribing to the shares. The underwriter bears a risk which is much

higher in soft underwriting.

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Soft underwriting

Soft underwriting is when an underwriter agrees to buy the shares at later stages as soon as

the pricing process is complete. He then, immediately places those shares with institutional

players. The risk faced by the underwriter as such is reduced to a small window of time. Also,

the soft underwriter has the option to invoke a force Majeure (acts of God) clause in case

there are certain factors beyond the control that can affect the underwriter’s ability to place

the shares with the buyers.

Cut Off Price

In Book building issue, the issuer is required to indicate either the price band or a floor price

in the red herring prospectus. The actual discovered issue price can be any price in the price

band or any price above the floor price. This issue price is called “Cut off price”. This is

decided by the issuer and LM after considering the book and investors’ appetite for the stock.

SEBI (DIP) guidelines permit only retail individual investors to have an option of applying at

cut off price.

Differential pricing

Pricing of an issue where one category is offered shares at a price different from the other

category is called differential pricing. In DIP Guidelines differential pricing is allowed only

if the securities to applicants in the firm allotment category is at a price higher than the price

at which the net offer to the public is made. The net offer to the public means the offer made

to the Indian public and does not include firm allotments or reservations or promoters’

contributions.

Basis of Allocation/Basis of Allotment

After the closure of the issue, the bids received are aggregated under different categories i.e.,

firm allotment, Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs), Non-Institutional Buyers (NIBs), Retail,

etc. The oversubscription ratios are then calculated for each of the categories as against the

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shares reserved for each of the categories in the offer document. Within each of these

categories, the bids are then segregated into different buckets based on the number of shares

applied for. The oversubscription ratio is then applied to the number of shares applied for

and the number of shares to be allotted for applicants in each of the buckets is determined.

Then, the number of successful allottees is determined. This process is followed in case of

proportionate allotment. In case of allotment for QIBs, it is subject to the discretion of the

post issue lead manager.

Qualified Institutional Buyer (QIBs)

Qualified Institutional Buyers are those institutional investors who are generally perceived to

possess expertise and the financial muscle to evaluate and invest in the capital markets.

In terms of clause 2.2.2B (v) of DIP Guidelines, a ‘Qualified Institutional

Buyer’ shall mean:

A . public financial institution as defined in section 4A of the Companies Act, 1956;

B . scheduled commercial banks;

C . mutual funds;

D . foreign institutional investor registered with SEBI;

E . multilateral and bilateral development financial institutions;

F . venture capital funds registered with SEBI.

G . foreign Venture capital investors registered with SEBI.

H . state Industrial Development Corporations.

I . insurance Companies registered with the Insurance Regulator and Development Authority

(IRDA).

J . provident Funds with minimum corpus of Rs. 25 crores

K . pension Funds with minimum corpus of Rs. 25 crores)

These entities are not required to be registered with SEBI as QIBs. Any entities falling under

the categories specified above are considered as QIBs for the purpose of participating in

primary issuance process.

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Application Supported by Blocked Amount

(ASBA)

Means an application for subscribing to an issue containing an authorization to block the application money in a bank account.

ASBA Investor

Means an Investor who intends to apply through ASBA process and

a. is a “Resident Retail Individual Investor”

b. is bidding at cut-off, with single option as to the number of shares bid for;

c. is applying through blocking of funds in a bank account with the SCSB;

d. has agreed not to revise his/her bid;

e. is not bidding under any of the reserved categories.

Self Certified Syndicate Bank (SCSB)

It is a Banker to an Issue registered under SEBI (Bankers to an Issue) Regulations, 1994

which offers the service of making an Applications Supported by Blocked

Amount and recognized as such by the Board)

Minority IPO

An initial public offering in which a parent company spins off one of its subsidiaries or

divisions, but retains a majority stake in the company after issuance. This means that after the

public offering, the parent company will still have a controlling stake of the new public

company.

The parent company may retain this majority stake forever or may slowly dissolve their

ownership over time. This type of IPO allows the company to raise funds, accessing the value

of the subsidiary, to fund its own operation or return value to shareholders.

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Public Offering Price - POP

The price at which new issues are offered to the public by an underwriter.

When underwriters determine the public offering price, they look at a number of factors.

Some of these include the company's financial statements (how profitable it is), public

trends, growth rates and even investor confidence.

Underpricing

The pricing of an initial public offering (IPO) below its market value. When the offer price is

lower than the price of the first trade, the stock is considered to be underpriced. A stock is

usually only underpriced temporarily because the laws of supply and demand will eventually

drive it toward its intrinsic value.

It is believed that IPOs are often underpriced because of concerns relating to liquidity and

uncertainty about the level at which the stock will trade. The less liquid and less predictable

the shares are, the more underpriced they will have to be in order to compensate investors

for the risk they are taking. Because an IPO's issuer tends to know more about the value of

the shares than the investor, a company must underprice its stock to encourage investors to

participate in the IPO.

Direct Public Offering - DPO

When a company raises capital by marketing its shares directly to its own customers,

employees, suppliers, distributors and friends in the community. DPOs are an alternative to

underwritten public offerings by securities broker-dealer firms where a company's shares

are sold to the broker's customers and prospects.

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Direct public offerings are considerably less expensive than traditional underwritten

offerings. Additionally, they don't have the restrictions that are usually associated with

bank and venture capital financing. On the other hand, a DPO will typically raise much

less than a traditional offering.

Quiet Period

In terms of an IPO, the period where an issuer is subject to a SEC ban on promotional

publicity. The quiet period usually lasts either 40 or 90 days from the IPO. In other words, If

you take your company public, you can't talk about your stock to anybody for 3 months.

There are two time windows commonly referred to as "quiet periods" during an IPO's

history. The first and the one linked above is the period of time following the filing of the

company's registration statement, but before SEC staff declare the registration statement

effective. During this time, issuers, company insiders, analysts, and other parties are legally

restricted in their ability to discuss or promote the upcoming IPO.

The other "quiet period" refers to a period of 40 calendar days following an IPO's first day of

public trading. During this time, insiders and any underwriters involved in the IPO, are

restricted from issuing any earnings forecasts or research reports for the company.

Regulatory changes enacted by the SEC as part of the Global Settlement, enlarged the "quiet

period" from 25 days to 40 days on July 9, 2002. When the quiet period is over, generally the

lead underwriters will initiate research coverage on the firm.

Further to this, the NASD and NYSE have approved a rule mandating a 10-day quiet period

after a secondary offering and a 15-day quiet period both before and after expiration of a

"lock-up agreement" for a securities offering.

Pricing

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Historically, IPOs both globally and in the US have been underpriced. The effect of initial

underpricing an IPO is to generate additional interest in the stock when it first becomes

publicly traded. This can lead to significant gains for investors who have been allocated

shares of the IPO at the offering price. However, underpricing an IPO results in "money left

on the table"—lost capital that could have been raised for the company had the stock been

offered at a higher price.

The danger of overpricing is also an important consideration. If a stock is offered to the

public at a higher price than the market will pay, the underwriters may have trouble meeting

their commitments to sell shares. Even if they sell all of the issued shares, if the stock falls in

value on the first day of trading, it may lose its marketability and hence even more of its

value.

Investment banks, therefore, take many factors into consideration when pricing an IPO, and

attempt to reach an offering price that is low enough to stimulate interest in the stock, but

high enough to raise an adequate amount of capital for the company. The process of

determining an optimal price usually involves the underwriters ("syndicate") arranging share

purchase commitments from lead institutional investors.

Issue price

A company that is planning an IPO appoints lead managers to help it decide on an

appropriate price at which the shares should be issued. There are two ways in which the

price of an IPO can be determined:

Either the company, with the help of its lead managers, fixes a price or

The price is arrived at through the process of book building.

Note: Not all IPOs are eligible for delivery settlement through the DTC system, which would

then either require the physical delivery of the stock certificates to the clearing agent bank's

custodian, or a delivery versus payment ("DVP") arrangement with the selling group

brokerage firm. This information is not sufficient.

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Who decides the price of an issue?

Indian primary market ushered in an era of free pricing in 1992. Following this, the

guidelines have provided that the issuer in consultation with Merchant Banker shall decide

the price. There is no price formula stipulated by SEBI. SEBI does not play any role in price

fixation. The company and merchant banker are however required to give full disclosures of

the parameters which they had considered while deciding the issue price. There are two types

of issues one where company and LM fix a price (called fixed price) and other, where the

company and LM stipulate a floor price or a price band and leave it to market forces to

determine the final price (price discovery through book building process).

a. What are Fixed Price offers?

An issuer company is allowed to freely price the issue. The basis of issue price is disclosed in

the offer document where the issuer discloses in detail about the qualitative and quantitative

factors justifying the issue price. The Issuer company can mention a price band of 20% (cap

in the price band should not be more than 20% of the floor price) in the Draft

offer documents filed with SEBI and actual price can be determined at a later date before

filing of the final offer document with SEBI/ROCs.

b. What does “price discovery through book building process” mean?

“Book Building” means a process undertaken by which a demand for the securities proposed

to be issued by a body corporate is elicited and built up and the price for the securities is

assessed on the basis of the bids obtained for the quantum of securities offered for

subscription by the issuer. This method provides an opportunity to the market to discover

price for securities.

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Book Building in Detail

How does Book Building work?

Book building is a process of price discovery. Hence, the Red Herring prospectus does not

contain a price. Instead, the red herring prospectus contains either the floor price of the

securities offered through it or a price band along with the range within which the bids can

move. The applicants bid for the shares quoting the price and the quantity that they would

like to bid at. Only the retail investors have the option of bidding at ‘cut-off’. After the

bidding process is complete, the ‘cut-off’ price is arrived at on the lines of Dutch auction.

The basis of Allotment (Refer Q. 15.j) is then finalized and letters allotment/refund is

undertaken. The final prospectus with all the details including the final issue price and the

issue size is filed with ROC, thus completing the issue process.

What is a price band?

The red herring prospectus may contain either the floor price for the securities or a price

band within which the investors can bid. The spread between the floor and the cap of the

price band shall not be more than 20%. In other words, it means that the cap should not be

more than 120% of the floor price. The price band can have a revision and such a revision in

the price band shall be widely disseminated by informing the stock exchanges, by issuing

press release and also indicating the change on the relevant website and the terminals of the

syndicate members. In case the price band is revised, the bidding period shall be extended for

a further period of three days, subject to the total bidding period not exceeding thirteen days.

Who decides the price band?

It may be understood that the regulatory mechanism does not play a role in setting the price

for issues. It is up to the company to decide on the price or the price band, in consultation

with Merchant Bankers. The basis of issue price is disclosed in the offer document. The issuer

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is required to disclose in detail about the qualitative and quantitative factors justifying the

issue price.

What is firm allotment?

A company making an issue to public can reserve some shares on “allotment on firm basis”

for some categories as specified in DIP guidelines. Allotment on firm basis indicates that

allotment to the investor is on firm basis. DIP guidelines provide for maximum % of shares

which can be reserved on firm basis. The shares to be allotted on “firm allotment category”

can be issued at a price different from the price at which the net offer to the public is made

provided that the price at which the security is being offered to the applicants in firm

allotment category is higher than the price at which securities are offered to public.

What is reservation on competitive basis?

Reservation on Competitive Basis is when allotment of shares is made in proportion to the

shares applied for by the concerned reserved categories. Reservation on competitive basis

can be made in a public issue to the Employees of the company, Shareholders of the

promoting companies in the case of a new company and shareholders of group companies in

the case of an existing company, Indian Mutual Funds, Foreign Institutional Investors

(including non resident Indians and overseas corporate bodies), Indian and Multilateral

development Institutions and Scheduled Banks.

Preference while doing the allotment

There cannot be any discretion in the allotment process. Prior to the SEBI Circular on DIP

Guidelines dated September 19, 2005, the allotment to the Qualified Institutional Buyers

(QIBs) was on a discretionary basis. This however has been amended and all allottees are

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allotted shares on a proportionate basis within their respective categories.

Who is eligible for reservation and how much?

In a book built issue allocation to Retail Individual Investors (RIIs), Non Institutional

Investors (NIIs) and Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs) is in the ratio of 35:15: 50

respectively. In case the book built issues are made pursuant to the requirement of mandatory

allocation of 60% to QIBs in terms of Rule 19(2)(b) of SCRR, the respective figures are 30%

for RIIs and 10% for NIIs. This is a transitory provision pending harmonization of the QIB

allocation in terms of the aforesaid Rule with that specified in the guidelines.

How is the Retail Investor defined as?

‘Retail individual investor’ means an investor who applies or bids for securities of or for a

value of not more than Rs.1,00,000.

GUIDELINES ON BOOK BUILDING

An issuer company proposing to issue capital through book buildingshall comply with the following:

75% Book Building Process

In an issue of securities to the public through a prospectus the option for 75% book building shall be available to the issuer company subject to the following:

The option of book-building shall be available to all body corporate which are eligible to make an issue of capital to the public.

The book-building facility shall be available as an alternative the company to the extent of the percentage of the issue which can be reserved for firm allotment.

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The copy of the draft prospectus filed with the Board may be circulated by the Book Runner to the institutional buyers who are eligible for firm allotment and to the intermediaries eligible to act as underwriters inviting offers for subscribing to the securities.

The draft prospectus to be circulated shall indicate the price band within which the securities are being offered for subscription.

The Book Runner on receipt of the offers shall maintain a record of the names and number of securities ordered and the price at which the institutional buyer or underwriter is willing to subscribe to securities under the placement portion.

The underwriters shall maintain a record of the orders received by him for subscribing to the issue out of the placement portion. Securities as well as the price at which the underwriter shall subscribe to the securities. Provided that the Book Runner shall have an option of requiring theunderwriters to the net offer to the public to pay in advance all monies required to be paid in respect of their underwriting commitment.

(xv) On determination of the issue price within two day, thereafter the prospectus shall be filed with the Registrar of Company.

(xvi) The issuer company shall open two different accounts for collection of application moneys, one f or the private placement portion and the other for the public subscription

The Book Runner and other intermediaries associated with the book building process shall maintain records of the book building process.

The Board shall have the right to inspect such records.

Offer to Public Through Book Building Process

An issuer company may, subject to the requirements make an issue of securities to the public through a prospectus in the following manner

a. 100% of the net offer to the public through book building process, or

b. 75% of the net offer to the public through book building process and 25% at the price determined through book building.

))

Procedure for bidding:

The method and process of bidding shall be subject to the following: Bid shall be open for at least three working days and not more than seven working days which may be extended to a maximum of ten working days in case the price band is revised.

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Bidding shall be permitted only if an electronically linked transparent facility is used.

Bidding Form

There shall be a standard bidding form to ensure uniformity in bidding and accuracy.

The bidding form shall contain information about the investor, the price and the number of securities that the investor wishes to bid.

The bidding form before being issued to the bidder shall be seriallynumbered at the bidding centres and date and time stamped.

)

Allocation / Allotment Procedure

In case an issuer company makes an issue of 100% of the net offer to public through 100% book building process.a) not less than 35% of the net offer to the public shall be available for allocation to retail individual investors;b) not less than 15% of the net offer to the public shall be available for allocation to non institutional investors i.e. investors other than retail individual investors and Qualified Institutional Buyers;

c) not more than 50% of the net offer to the public shall be available for allocation to Qualified Institutional Buyers. Provided that 50% of net offer to public shall be mandatorily allotted to the Qualified Institutional Buyers, in case the issuer company is making a public issue.

Maintenance of Books and Records

(i) A final book of demand showing the result of the allocation process shall be maintained by the book runner/s.

(ii) The Book Runner/s and other intermediaries in the book building process associated shall maintain records of the book building prices.

(iii) The Board shall have the right to inspect the records, books and documents relating to the Book building process and such person shall extend full co-operation.

GUIDELINES ON INITIAL PUBLIC OFFERS THROUGH THE STOCK EXCHANGE

ON-LINE SYSTEM (e-IPO)

A company proposing to issue capital to public through the on-line system of the stock exchange for offer of securities shall comply with the requirements as contained in this

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Chapter in addition to other requirements for public issues as given in these Guidelines, wherever applicable.

Agreement with the Stock exchange.

The company shall enter into an agreement with the Stock Exchange(s) which have the requisite system of on-line offer of securities.

The agreement mentioned in the above clause shall specify inter-alia, the rights, duties, responsibilities and obligations of the company and stock exchange (s) inter se. The agreement may also provide for a dispute resolution mechanism between the company and the stock exchange.

Appointment of Brokers

The stock exchange, shall appoint brokers of the exchange, who are registered with SEBI, for the purpose of accepting applications and placing orders with the company.

For the purposes of this Chapter, the brokers, so appointed accepting applications and application monies, shall be considered as ‘collection centres’.

The broker/s so appointed, shall collect the money from his/their clientfor every order placed by him/them and in case the client fails to payfor shares allocated as per the Guidelines, the broker shall pay suchamount.

Appointment of Registrar to the Issue

The company shall appoint a Registrar to the Issue having electronicconnectivity with the Stock Exchange/s through which the securitiesare offered under the system.

Listing

The company may apply for listing of its securities on an exchangeother than the exchange through which it offers its securities to publicthrough the on-line system.

Responsibility of the Lead Manager

The Lead Manger shall be responsible for co-ordination of all theactivities amongst various intermediaries connected in the issue /System.

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The names of brokers appointed for the issue alongwith the names ofthe other intermediaries, namely, Lead managers to the issue andRegistrars to the Issue shall be disclosed in the prospectus andapplication form.

Mode of operation

The company shall, after filing the offer document with ROC and beforeopening of the issue, make an issue advertisement in one English andone Hindi daily with nation wide circulation, and one regional daily withwide circulation at the place where the registered office of the issuercompany is situated.

SHELF PROSPECTUS

Shelf prospectus shall apply to the issues of securities to be madeby public sector banks, scheduled commercial banks and publicfinancial institutions.

The provisions of these guidelines relating to public issues shall apply in respect of suchissues.

Role of intermediaries

a. Who are the intermediaries in an issue?

Merchant Bankers to the issue or Book Running Lead Managers (BRLM), syndicate

members, Registrars to the issue, Bankers to the issue, Auditors of the company,

Underwriters to the issue, Solicitors, etc. are the intermediaries to an issue. The issuer

discloses the addresses, telephone/fax numbers and email addresses of these intermediaries.

In addition to this, the issuer also discloses the details of the compliance officer appointed by

the company for the purpose of the issue.

b. Who is eligible to be a BRLM?

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A Merchant banker possessing a valid SEBI registration in accordance with the SEBI

(Merchant Bankers) Regulations, 1992 is eligible to act as a Book Running Lead Manager to

an issue.

c. What is the role of a Lead Manager? (pre and post issue)

In the pre-issue process, the Lead Manager (LM) takes up the due diligence of company’s

operations/ management/ business plans/ legal etc. Other activities of the LM include

drafting and design of Offer documents, Prospectus, statutory advertisements and

memorandum containing salient features of the Prospectus. The BRLMs shall ensure

compliance with stipulated requirements and completion of prescribed formalities with the

Stock Exchanges, ROC and SEBI including finalisation of Prospectus and ROC filing.

Appointment of other intermediaries viz., Registrar(s), Printers, Advertising Agency and

Bankers to the Offer is also included in the pre-issue processes. The LM also draws up the

various marketing strategies for the issue. The post issue activities including management of

escrow accounts, coordinate non-institutional allocation, intimation of allocation and

dispatch of refunds to bidders etc are performed by the LM. The post Offer activities for the

Offer will involve essential follow-up steps, which include the finalization of trading and

dealing of instruments and dispatch of certificates and demat of delivery of shares, with the

various agencies connected with the work such as the Registrar(s) to the Offer and Bankers

to the Offer and the bank handling refund business. The merchant banker shall be

responsible for ensuring that these agencies fulfill their functions and enable it to discharge

this responsibility through suitable agreements with the Company. A merchant banker is

required to do the necessary due diligence in case of QIP mechanism.

d. What is the role of a registrar?

The Registrar finalizes the list of eligible allottees after deleting the invalid applications and

ensures that the corporate action for crediting of shares to the demat accounts of the

applicants is done and the dispatch of refund orders to those applicable are sent. The Lead

manager coordinates with the Registrar to ensure follow up so that that the flow of

Page 45: Indian IPO Market

applications from collecting bank branches, processing of the applications and other matters

till the basis of allotment is finalized, dispatch security certificates and refund orders

completed and securities listed.

e. What is the role of bankers to the issue?

Bankers to the issue, as the name suggests, carries out all the activities of ensuring that the

funds are collected and transferred to the Escrow accounts. The Lead Merchant Banker shall

ensure that Bankers to the Issue are appointed in all the mandatory collection centers as

specified in DIP Guidelines. The LM also ensures follow-up with bankers to the issue

to get quick estimates of collection and advising the issuer about closure of the issue, based

on the correct figures.

f. Question on Due diligence

The Lead Managers state that they have examined various documents including those

relating to litigation like commercial disputes, patent disputes, disputes with collaborators

etc. and other materials in connection with the finalization of the offer document pertaining

to the said issue; and on the basis of such examination and the discussions with the

Company, its Directors and other officers, other agencies, independent verification of the

statements concerning the objects of the issue, projected profitability, price justification, etc.,

they state that they have ensured that they are in compliance with SEBI, the Government and

any other competent authority in this behalf.

The Underwriting Process

Getting a piece of a hot IPO is very difficult, if not impossible. To understand why, we need

to know how an IPO is done, a process known as underwriting.

Page 46: Indian IPO Market

When a company wants to go public, the first thing it does is hire an investment bank. A

company could theoretically sell its shares on its own, but realistically, an investment

bank is required - it's just the way Wall Street works. Underwriting is the process of

raising money by either debt or equity (in this case we are referring to equity). You can

think of underwriters as middlemen between companies and the investing public. The

biggest underwriters are Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Credit Suisse First Boston,

Lehman Brothers and Morgan Stanley.

The company and the investment bank will first meet to negotiate the deal. Items usually

discussed include the amount of money a company will raise, the type of securities to be

issued and all the details in the underwriting agreement. The deal can be structured in a

variety of ways.

For example, in a firm commitment, the underwriter guarantees that a certain amount will be

raised by buying the entire offer and then reselling to the public. In a best efforts agreement,

however, the underwriter sells securities for the company but doesn't guarantee the amount

raised. Also, investment banks are hesitant to shoulder all the risk of an offering. Instead,

they form a syndicate of underwriters. One underwriter leads the syndicate and the others

sell a part of the issue.

Once all sides agree to a deal, the investment bank puts together a registration statement

to be filed with the SEC. This document contains information about the offering as well

as company info such as financial statements, management background, any legal

problems, where the money is to be used and insider holdings.

The SEC then requires a cooling off period, in which they investigate and make sure all

material information has been disclosed.

Once the SEC approves the offering, a date (the effective date) is set when the stock will

be offered to the public. During the cooling off period the underwriter puts together what

is known as the red herring. This is an initial prospectus containing all the information

about the company except for the offer price and the effective date, which aren't known

at that time. With the red herring in hand, the underwriter and company attempt to hype

and build up interest for the issue. They go on a road show - also known as the "dog and

pony show" - where the big institutional investors are courted. As the effective date

Page 47: Indian IPO Market

approaches, the underwriter and company sit down and decide on the price. This isn't an

easy decision: it depends on the company, the success of the road show and, most

importantly, current market conditions. Of course, it's in both parties' interest to get as

much as possible. Finally, the securities are sold on the stock market and the money is

collected from investors

Guide to understand an Offer Document

This section basically tries to tell the reader about the structure of presentation of the content

in the Offer Document. This is with a view to help the reader navigate through the content of

an offer document.

A. Cover Page

The Cover Page of the offer document covers full contact details of the issuer company, lead

managers and registrars, the nature, number, price and amount of instruments offered and

issue size, and the particulars regarding listing. Other details such as Credit Rating, IPO

Grading, if opted for, risks in relation to the first issue, etc are disclosed if applicable.

B. Risk Factors

Here, the issuer’s management gives its view on the Internal and external risks faced by the

company. Here, the company also makes a note on the forward looking statements. This

information is disclosed in the initial pages of the document and it is also clearly disclosed in

the abridged prospectus. It is generally advised that the investors should go through all the

risk factors of the company before making an investment decision.

Page 48: Indian IPO Market

C. Introduction

The introduction covers a summary of the industry and business of the issuer company, the

offering details in brief, summary of consolidated financial, operating and other data.

General Information about the company, the merchant bankers and their responsibilities, the

details of brokers/syndicate members to the Issue, credit rating (in case of debt issue),

debenture trustees (in case of debt issue), monitoring agency, book building process in brief

and details of underwriting Agreements are given here. Important details of capital structure,

objects of the offering, funds requirement, funding plan, schedule of implementation, funds

deployed, sources of financing of funds already deployed, sources of financing for the

balance fund requirement, interim use of funds, basic terms of issue, basis for issue price, tax

benefits are covered.

D. About us

This presents a review of on the details of the business of the company, business strategy,

competitive strengths, insurance, industry-regulation (if applicable), history and corporate

structure, main objects, subsidiary details, management and board of directors,

compensation, corporate governance, related party transactions, exchange rates, currency of

presentation dividend policy and management's discussion and analysis of financial

condition and results of operations are given.

E. Financial Statements

Financial statement, changes in accounting policies in the last three years and differences

between the accounting policies and the Indian Accounting Policies (if the Company has

presented its Financial Statements also as per Either US GAAP/IAS are presented.

Page 49: Indian IPO Market

F. Legal and other information

Outstanding litigations and material developments, litigations involving the company and its

subsidiaries, promoters and group companies are disclosed. Also material developments

since the last balance sheet date, government approvals/licensing arrangements, investment

approvals (FIPB/RBI etc.), all government and other approvals, technical approvals,

indebtedness, etc. are disclosed.

G. Other regulatory and statutory disclosures

Under this head, the following information is covered: authority for the Issue, prohibition by

SEBI, eligibility of the company to enter the capital market, disclaimer clause, disclaimer in

respect of jurisdiction, distribution of information to investors, disclaimer clause of the stock

exchanges, listing, impersonation, minimum subscription, letters of allotment or refund

orders, consents, expert opinion, changes in the auditors in the last 3 years, expenses of the

issue, fees payable to the lead managers, fees payable to the issue management team, fees

payable to the registrars, underwriting commission, brokerage and selling commission,

previous rights and public issues, previous issues for cash, issues otherwise than for cash,

outstanding debentures or bonds, outstanding preference shares, commission and brokerage

on, previous issues, capitalization of reserves or profits, option to subscribe in the issue,

purchase of property, revaluation of assets, classes of shares, stock market data for equity,

shares of the company, promise vis-à-vis performance in the past issues and mechanism for

redressal of investor grievances.

H. Offering information

Under this head, the following information is covered: Terms of the Issue, ranking of equity

shares, mode of payment of dividend, face value and issue price, rights of the equity

shareholder, market lot, nomination facility to investor, issue procedure, book building

procedure if applicable, bid form, who can bid, maximum and minimum bid size, bidding

process, bidding bids at different price levels, escrow mechanism, terms of payment and

Page 50: Indian IPO Market

payment into the escrow collection account, electronic registration of bids, build up of the

book and revision of bids, price discovery and allocation, signing of underwriting agreement

and filing of prospectus with SEBI/ROC, announcement of statutory advertisement, issuance

of confirmation of allocation note("can") and allotment in the issue, designated date, general

instructions, instructions for completing the bid form, payment instructions, submission of bid

form, other instructions, disposal of application and application moneys, , interest on refund

of excess bid amount, basis of allotment or allocation, method of proportionate allotment,

dispatch of refund orders, communications, undertaking by the company, utilization of issue

proceeds, restrictions on foreign ownership of Indian securities, etc.,

I. Other Information

This covers description of equity shares and terms of the Articles of Association, material

contracts and documents for inspection, declaration, definitions and abbreviations, etc.,

Resource mobilization in primary market

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Page 52: Indian IPO Market
Page 53: Indian IPO Market

Resource mobilization in private placement market

Page 54: Indian IPO Market

GUIDELINES FOR OTCEI ISSUES

Any company making an initial public offer of equity share or any other security convertible

at a later date into equity shares and proposing to list them on the Over The Counter

Exchange of India (OTCEI) shall comply with all the requirements specified in these

guidelines:

- Eligibility norms

- Any company making an initial public offer of equity share or any other security

convertible at a later date into equity shares and proposing to list them on the OTCEI, is

exempted from the eligibility norms specified in Clause 2.2 of Chapter II of these guidelines

subject to its fulfilling the following besides the listing criteria laid down by the

OTCEI:

i. it is sponsored by a member of the OTCEI and;

Page 55: Indian IPO Market

ii. has appointed at least two market makers (one compulsory and one additional market

maker).

Any offer for sale of equity share or any other security convertible at a later date into equity

shares resulting out of a Bought out Deal (BOD) registered with the OTCEI is exempted from

the eligibility norms specified in Clause 2.2 of Chapter II of these guidelines subject to the

fulfillment of the listing criteria laid down by the OTCEI.

Provided that the issuer company which has made issue of capital under Clause above, shall

not delist its securities from OTCEI for a minimum period of three years from the date of

admission to dealing of such securities on OTCEI..

Pricing Norms

- Any offer for sale of equity share or any other security convertible at a later date into equity

shares resulting out of a Bought out Deal (BOD) registered with OTCEI is exempted from the

pricing norms specified in Clause 3.2 of Chapter III of these guidelines subject to the

following conditions:

i) The promoters after such issue shall retain at least 20% of the total issued capital with the

lock-in of three years from the date of the allotment of securities in the proposed issue; and

ii) At least two market makers (One Compulsory and one additional market maker) are

appointed in accordance with the Market Making guidelines stipulated by the OTCEI.

Projections

In case of securities proposed to be listed on OTCEI, for the purpose of Clause (6.12.1) of

Chapter VI of these guidelines, projections based on the appraisal done by the sponsor who

undertakes to do market making activity in the securities offered in the proposed issue can be

included in the offer document subject to compliance with other

conditions contained in the said clause.

Page 56: Indian IPO Market

GUIDELINES FOR BONUS ISSUES

A listed company proposing to issue bonus shares shall comply with the following:

(a) No company shall, pending conversion of FCDs/PCDs, issue any shares by way of bonus

unless similar benefit is extended to the holders of such FCDs/PCDs, through reservation of

shares in proportion to such convertible part of FCDs or PCDs.

(b) The shares so reserved may be issued at the time of conversion(s) of such debentures on

the same terms on which the bonus issues were made. The bonus issue shall be made out of

free reserves built out of the genuine profits or share premium collected in cash only.

The Company

(a) has not defaulted in payment of interest or principal in respect of fixed deposits and

interest on existing debentures or principal on redemption thereof and

(b) has sufficient reason to believe that it has not defaulted in respect of the payment of

statutory dues of the employees such as contribution to provident fund, gratuity, bonus etc.

Board of Directors must implement the proposal within a period of six months from the date

of such approval and shall not have the option of changing the decision.

(i) The Articles of Association of the company shall contain a provision for capitalisation of

reserves, etc.

(ii) If there is no such provision in the Articles the company shall pass a Resolution at its

general body meeting making provisions in the Articles of Associations for capitalisation.

Resolution

Consequent to the issue of Bonus shares if the subscribed and paid-up capital exceed the

authorised share capital, a Resolution shall be passed by the company at its general body

meeting for increasing the authorised Capital.

Page 57: Indian IPO Market

Certificate

A certificate duly signed by the issuer company and counter signed by statutory auditor or by

Company Secretary in practice to the effect that the provision of clause.

PAST ISSUES AT NSESr. No.

Name of the issue LTP Book Running Lead Manager Date of Issue

No. of members

No. of Bidding centers

Issue Size (lakh shares)

Price Range

Issue Price (Rs.)

Date ofListing

Introduced in F&Oalongwith IPO $

1 20 MICRONS LIMITED

- KEYNOTE CORPORATE SERVICES LTD

08/09/2008 to 11/09/2008

46 58 43.50632Rs 50 TO Rs 55

55 *

Not eligible in F&O segment

2

RESURGERE MINES & MINERALS INDIA LIMITED

148.55

Brlm Motilal Oswal Investment Advisors Pvt Ltd Co Brlm PL Capital Markets Pvt. Ltd and Ashika Capital Ltd

11/08/2008 to 13/08/2008

41 50 44.5Rs 263 to Rs 272

270.00

01-Sep-2008

Not eligible in F&O segment

3

AUSTRAL COKE & PROJECTS LIMITED

248.90

Brlm Allbank Finance Limited Co Brlm PL Capital Markets Private Limited,Saffron Capital Advisors Private Limited and Elara Capital (India) Private Limited

07/08/2008 to 13/08/2008

83 65 72.6Rs 164 TO Rs 196

196.00

04-Sep-2008

Not eligible in F&O segment

4 NU TEK INDIA LIMITED

128.55

Brlm INDIA INFOLINE LIMITED and SPA MERCHANT BANKERS LIMITED

29/07/2008 to 01/08/2008

128 56 45Rs 170 to Rs 192

192.00

27-Aug-2008

Not eligible in F&O segment

5

VISHAL INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES LIMITED

345.40

Brlm Keynote Corporate Services and IDBI Capital Market Services Limited

21/07/2008 to 24/07/2008

100 49 27.9Rs 140 to Rs150

150.00

11-Aug-2008

Not eligible in F&O segment

6 BIRLA COTSYN INDIA LIMITED

7.60

Brlm ALLBANK FINANCE LIMITED CoBrlm SAFFRON CAPITAL ADVISORS PRIVATE LIMITED,NEXGEN CAPITALS LIMITED and CHARTERED CAPITAL AND INVESTMENT LIMITED

30/06/2008 to 09/07/2008

85 60

(.) No of Equity Shares aggregating to Rs. 10,753 Lakhs excluding Promoter Contribution of Rs 3665 Lacs

RS.12 TO RS.14

14 30-Jul-2008

Not eligible in F&O segment

7 KSK ENERGY VENTURES LIMITED

218.35

Brlm Kotak Mahindra Capital Company Limited, IDFC-SSKI Private Limited, Morgan

23/06/2008 to

131 60 346.11 RS.240 TO

240.00

14-Jul-2008

Eligible, subject to SEBI

Page 58: Indian IPO Market

Stanley India Company Private Limited, Lehman Brothers Securities Private Limited and Edelweiss Capital Limited, CoBrlm Axis Bank Limited

25/06/2008 RS.255 approval

8LOTUS EYE CARE HOSPITAL LIMITED

35.15

Brlm Keynote Corporate Services Ltd, CoBrlm Canara Bank- Merchant Banking Division

12/06/2008 to 20/06/2008

61 48 100Rs 36 to Rs 38

38.00 11-Jul-2008

Not Eligible

9FIRST WINNER INDUSTRIES LIMITED

66.50Almondz Global Securities Limited

09/06/2008 to 17/06/2008

121 48 55Rs 115 to Rs 125

125.00

08-Jul-2008

Not Eligible

10ARCHIDPLY INDUSTRIES LIMITED

35.00Motilal Oswal Investment Advisors Private Limited

11/06/2008 to 17/06/2008

105 56 66.1572Rs 70 to Rs 80

74.0004-Jul-2008

Not Eligible

11

SEJAL ARCHITECTURAL GLASS LIMITED

46.90 Saffron Capital Advisors Private Limited

09/06/2008 to 12/06/2008

80 58 91.94155Rs 105 to Rs 115

115.00

01-Jul-2008

Not Eligible

12NIRAJ CEMENT STRUCTURALS LIMITED

- Allbank Finance Limited26/05/2008 to 30/05/2008

72 59 32.5Rs 175 to Rs 190

190 *Not Eligible

13ANU’S LABORATORIES LIMITED

-Almondz Global Securities Limited

12/05/2008 to 15/05/2008

119 52 38.2Rs 200 to Rs 210

210 *Not Eligible

14GOKUL REFOILS AND SOLVENT LIMITED

265.55

Anand Rathi Financial Services Limited and Intensive Fiscal Services Private Limited

08/05/2008 to 13/05/2008

165 52 71.58392Rs 175 to Rs 195

195.00

04-Jun-2008

Not Eligible

15AISHWARYA TELECOM LIMITED

-SREI Capital Markets Limited and Sobhagya Capital Options Limited

15/04/2008 to 17/04/2008

139 64 40Rs 32 to Rs 35

35 *Not Eligible

16KIRI DYES AND CHEMICALS LIMITED

154.65 CENTRUM CAPITAL LIMITED

25/03/2008 to 02/04/2008

141 53 37.5Rs 125 to Rs 150

150.00

22-Apr-2008

Not Eligible

17TITAGARH WAGONS LIMITED

664.95

BRLM KOTAK MAHINDRA CAPITAL COMPANY LIMITED Co BRLM JM Financial Consultants Private Limited

24/03/2008 to 27/03/2008

141 50 23.83768Rs 540 to Rs 610

540.00

21-Apr-2008

Not Eligible

18Sita Shree Food Products Limited

13.95BRLM Keynote Corporate Services Ltd

11/03/2008 to 14/03/2008

95 48

(.) Equity Shares aggregating Rs. 315 million

Rs 27 to Rs 30

3007-APR-2008

Not Eligible

19

GAMMON INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS LIMITED

75.10

BRLM IDFC - SSKI Private Limited And Macquarie India Advisory Services Private Limited Co BRLM Collins Stewart Inga Private Limited

10/03/2008 to 13/03/2008

95 48 165.5Rs 167 to Rs 200

167.00

03-Apr-2008

Not Eligible

20 RURAL ELECTRIFICATION CORPORATION

81.40 IL&FS Investsmart Securities Limited, ICICI Securities Limited and SBI Capital Markets Limited

19/02/2008 to 22/02/2008

144 57 1561.2 Rs 90 to Rs 105

105.00

12-Mar-2008

Eligible, subject to SEBI

Page 59: Indian IPO Market

LIMITED approval

21V-GUARD INDUSTRIES LIMITED

52.45Anand Rathi Financial Services Limited

18/02/2008 to 21/02/2008

120 60 80Rs 80 to Rs 85

82.0013-Mar-2008

Not Eligible

22GSS AMERICA INFOTECH LIMITED

239.50

BRLM RELIGARE SECURITIES LIMITED and EDELWEISS CAPITAL LIMITED

11/02/2008 to 15/02/2008

146 60 34.97495Rs.400 to Rs.440

400.00

07-Mar-2008

Not Eligible

23SVEC CONSTRUCTIONS LIMITED

-Karvy Investor Services Limited and Centrum Capital Limited

04/02/2008 to 13/02/2008

118 50 40Rs 80 to Rs 90

*

Issue withdrawn on 12th Feb 2008

Not Eligible

24EMAAR MGF LAND LIMITED -

Global Coordinators and BRLM-Enam Securities Private Limited and DSP Merrill Lynch Limited,BRLM-Citigroup Global Markets India Private Limited,Goldman Sachs (India) Securities Private Limited,HSBC Securities AndCapitalMarkets(India)Private Limited,J.P. Morgan India Private Limited,Kotak Mahindra Capital Company Limited and ICICI Securities Limited

01/02/2008 to 11/02/2008

192 42 1025.70623Rs 530 to Rs 630

*

Issue withdrawn on 8th Feb 2008

Eligible, subject to SEBI approval

25WOCKHARDT HOSPITALS LIMITED

-

Joint Global Coordinators and BRLM-Citigroup Global Markets India Private Limited and Kotak Mahindra Capital Company Limited,BRLMs ICICISecurities Limited and SBI Capital Markets Limited

31/01/2008 to 07/02/2008

130 69 250.87097Rs225 to Rs260

*Issue withdrawn

Eligible, subject to SEBI approval

26Tulsi Extrusions Limited 28.95

BRLM Almondz Global Securities Limited

01/02/2008 to 05/02/2008

110 63 57Rs.80 to Rs.85

85.0025-Feb-2008

Not Eligible

27

IRB Infrastructure Developers Limited

116.40

BRLM Deutsche Equities India Private Limited Co BRLM Kotak Mahindra Capital Company Limited

31/01/2008 to 05/02/2008

118 58 510.57666Rs.185 to Rs.220

185.00

25-Feb-2008

Eligible, subject to SEBI approval

28 SHRIRAM EPC LIMITED

249.40

BRLM Kotak Mahindra Capital Company Limited ;ICICI Securities Limited Co BRLM Motilal Oswal Investment Advisors Private Limited

29/01/2008 to 01/02/2008

128 48 50Rs.290 to Rs.330

300.00

20-Feb-2008

Not eligible

29Bang Overseas Limited

285.45

BRLM Almondz Global Securities Limited

28/01/2008 to 31/01/2008

110 56 35Rs.200 to Rs.207

207.00

20-Feb-2008

Not eligible

30ONMOBILE GLOBAL LIMITED

509.15

BRLM Deutsche Equities India Private Limited;ICICI Securities Limited

24/01/2008 to 29/01/2008

90 48 109.00545Rs.425 to Rs.450

440.00

19-Feb-2008

Not eligible

31 KNR Construction

59.95 BRLM Axis Bank Limited 24/01/2008 to

64 42 78.7457 Rs.170 to

170 18-Feb- Not

Page 60: Indian IPO Market

Limited 29/01/2008 Rs.180 2008 eligible

32CORDS CABLE INDUSTRIES LIMITED

82.50BRLM COLLINS STEWART INGA PRIVATE LIMITED

21/01/2008 to 24/01/2008

72 57 30.85Rs.125 to Rs.135

135.00

13-Feb-2008

Not eligible

33J. Kumar Infraprojects Limited

82.35BRLM Anand Rathi Securities Limited

18/01/2008 to 23/01/2008

96 49 65Rs.110 to Rs.120

11012-Feb-2008

Not eligible

34RELIANCE POWER LIMITED

165.25

BRLM Kotak Mahindra Capital Company Limited, UBS Securities India Private Limited, ABN AMRO Securities (India) Private Limited, Deutsche Equities India Private Limited, Enam Securities Private Limited, ICICI Securities Limited, JM Financial Consultants Private Limited and J P Morgan India Private Limited CO BRLM Macquarie India Advisory Services Private Limited and SBI Capital Markets Limited

15/01/2008 to 18/01/2008

208 128 2280Rs.405 to Rs.450

450.00

11-Feb-2008

Eligible, subject to SEBI approval

35

FUTURE CAPITAL HOLDINGS LIMITED

306.40

Kotak Mahindra Capital Company Limited, Enam Securities Private Limited, JM Financial Consultants Private Limited, and UBS Securities India Private Limited

11/01/2008 to 16/01/2008

156 59 64.228Rs.700 to Rs.765

765.00

01-Feb-2008

Not Eligible

RECOMMENDATIONS

Since the primary market has continued to remain dormant, SEBI considered on priority

basis the recommendations made by the “Informal Group on Primary Market”, and accepted

most of the recommendations, including the following, which were accepted for immediate

implementation:—

(i) Primary issues to be compulsorily made through the depository mode after a specified

date.

(ii) 100 per cent book building in respect of issues of Rs. 25 crore and above.

(iii) Reduction in the minimum number of mandatory collection centres in respect

of issues above Rs. 10 crore to 4 metropolitan cities plus the place having the regional stock

exchange.

Page 61: Indian IPO Market

In order to facilitate flow of funds to the infrastructure sector, the SEBI Board

decided to grant specific relaxations to public issues by infrastructure companies.

These relaxations would be applicable to infrastructure companies as defined under

Section 10 (23G) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 subject to the condition that their

projects are appraised by any Development Financial Institution (DFI) or

Infrastructure Development Finance Company (IDFC) or Infrastructure Leasing and

Financial Services (IL&FS). Further, the projects must also have a participation of at

least 5 per cent of the project cost in debt and/or equity by the appraising institution.

Subject to these conditions, the infrastructure company can avail of specified

relaxations/exemptions from the existing requirements as per SEBI's Disclosure and

Investor Protection Guidelines

Relaxations to Public Issues Infrastructure

Companies

Exemption from the requirement of making a minimum public offer of 25 per cent of

securities and also from the requirement stipulating 5 shareholders per Rs. 1 lakh of

offer.

Exemption from the minimum subscription of 90 per cent provided disclosure is made

about the alternate source of funding considered by the company, in the event of

under-subscription in the public issue.

Permission to freely price the offerings in the domestic market provided the promotor

companies along with equipment suppliers and other strategic investors subscribe to

50 per cent of the equity at the same/higher price as/than the price offered to the

public. However, adequate disclosures on justification for the pricing need to be made

in the offer documents.

Permission to keep the isues open for 21 days to enable the companies to mobilise

funds.

Page 62: Indian IPO Market

Exemption from the requirement to create and maintain a debenture redemption

reserve (DRR) in case of debenture issues.

Primary Markets Reforms 1997-98

Entry barrier for unlisted companies modified as dividend payment in immediately

preceding 3 years.

A listed company required to meet the entry norm only if the post-issue net worth

becomes more than five times the pre-issue net worth.

Companies required to make their partly paid-up shares fully paid up or forfeit the

same, before making a public/rights issue.

Unlisted company allowed to freely price its securities provided it has shown net

profit in the immediately preceding 3 years subject to its fulfilling the existing

disclosure requirements.

The Promoters’ contribution for public issues made uniform at 20% irrespective of

the issue size.

Written consent from share holders in regard to lock-in made compulsory for

securities to be offered for promoter’s contribution.

Appointment of Registrar to an issue for rights issues made mandatory.

A provision made regarding disclosure of the share holding of the promoters whose

names figure in the paragraph on “Promoters and their background” in the offer

document.

The SEBI (Registrars to an Issue and Share Transfer Agents) Rules and Regulations

1993 have been amended to provide for an arm’s length relationship between the

Issuer and the Registrar to the Issue. It has now been stipulated that no Registrar to

an Issue can act as such for any issue of securities made by any body corporate, if the

Page 63: Indian IPO Market

Registrar to the issue and the Issuer company are associates. With a view to

facilitating raising of funds by infrastructure projects, SEBI has allowed debt

instruments to be listed on the Stock Exchanges without prior listing of equity.

Corporates with infrastructure projects and Municipal Corporations to be exempted

from the requirements of Rule 19(2b) of Securities (Contract) Regulation Rules to

facilitate public offer and listing of its pure debt instruments as well as debt

instruments fully or partly convertible into equity without the requirement of prior

listing of equity but subject to conditions like investment grade rating.

Only body corporates to be allowed to function as Merchant Bankers.

Multiple categories of merchant bankers to be abolished and there shall be only one

entity viz., Merchant Banker. Presently, the Merchant Banker allowed to perform

underwriting activity but required to seek separate registration to function as a

Portfolio Manager under the SEBI (Portfolio Manager) Rules and Regulations, 1993.

Merchant Bankers to be prohibited from carrying on fund based activities other than

those related exclusively to the capital market; the activities undertaken by NBFCs

such as accepting deposits, leasing, bill discounting, etc. not to be allowed to be

undertaken by a merchant banker; the existing NBFCs performing merchant banking

activities to be given suitable time to restructure their activities.