So far, the government has sold its minority stake in three PSUs — PFC, REC and Dredging Corp — to raise Rs 3,300 crore so far in this financial year. It has scheduled a 10 per cent stake sale in Indian Oil Corp on Monday. “We have already completed three issues and on Monday we will have the fourth one. Although we are more than a monthaway from the end of the first half, this will be the best first half in the past seven fiscals,” Disinvestment Secretary Aradhana Johri said.
In the first half of FY15, the Department of Disinvestment could not divest stake in a single PSU, while in the same period of 2013-14 it had sold stake in six PSUs to garner Rs 1,300 crore. In first six months of 2012-13 as well, no divestment took place, while one issue could materialise in the same period of 2011-12 to collect Rs 1,500 crore. In the first-half of 2010-11, the DoD garnered Rs 2,400 crore through minority stake sales in PSUs, while the figure for the first half of 2009-10 was Rs 4,200 crore.
The disinvestment department has been set a mammoth target of Rs 69,500 crore in FY16. Of this, Rs 41,000 crore is expected to come from minority stake sales in PSUs, and another Rs 28,500 crore from strategic stake sales.
So far in FY16, Indian equity markets have been volatile due to a slump in the Chinese market, the Greek crisis and fears of an impending rate hike by the US Federal Reserve.
The BSE Sensex has dropped by over 3 per cent since the beginning of FY16, but the three disinvestments so far have been successful, with strong demand from retail and institutional investors.
“Investors feel India is an outlier among emerging markets. We have a robust pipeline of stocks and the work is to keep the ball rolling,” said Johri, who took charge of DoD in October last year.
The DoD has lined up over two dozen PSUs, including ONGC, BHEL, NALCO, NMDC, MMTC and Engineers India, for stake sale. The Government would sell 10 per cent stake in IOC on Monday at a floor price of Rs 387 a share — a two per cent discount over the latest closing -- which is likely to fetch Rs 9,302 crore to the exchequer.
The government, which holds 68.6 per cent interest in IOC, will sell 24.28 crore shares through an offer for sale (OFS).
Johri further said investors who are allotted shares in the IOC share sale, would also be eligible for dividend of Rs 6.60 per share. The IOC board declared this dividend in its meeting on May 29 .
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