Equity share sales are gathering pace underpinned by buoyancy in the secondary market with valuations hovering around lifetime highs. On Thursday, Indigo Paints, which is among India’s top five paint companies, announced its Rs 1,170-crore initial public offering (IPO). The announcement came a day after state-owned Indian Railway Finance Corporation (IRFC) set the dates and pricing for its Rs 4,500 crore offering. Meanwhile, the government also launched Rs 2,600-crore share sale in Steel Authority India (SAIL), which saw nearly two times subscription.
Investment bankers said more IPOs including that of Home First Finance Company, RailTel Corporation of India, Kalyan Jewellers India, Stove Kraft and Suryoday Small Finance Bank will be rolled out over the next three or four weeks.
IRFC will be the first issue to hit the markets in 2021. The issue opens on January 18. The government is looking to raise Rs 1,500 crore, while the railway financing firm will issue fresh shares worth Rs 3,000 crore. At the top-end of the price band of Rs 26, IRFC will have a market capitalisation of nearly Rs 27,000 crore.
Indigo Paints IPO too, will be a mix of fresh and secondary component. The Pune-based firm will raise Rs 300 crore of fresh capital and existing shareholders will offload shares worth Rs 870 crore. At the issue price of Rs 1,490, Indigo Paints will have a market cap of around Rs 7,000 crore and its IPO will open on January 20.
“We are seeing strong investor demand for any share sales that are getting launched whether it is an IPO, OFS or large block deals,” said Dharmesh Mehta. Managing Director & CEO - DAM Capital Advisors.
In 2020, Rs 26,770 was raised by way of IPOs, a jump of two times over the previous year. Overall equity fund raise stood at a highest-ever Rs 1.85 trillion.