The carnage in DLF shares began soon after the markets opened this morning in the first trading session after Sebi's order, wherein the company and six top executives have been barred from accessing securities markets for three years for disclosure lapses seven years ago at the time of its IPO.
The stock hit a life-time high of Rs 102.70 with a plunge of 29.99 per cent, before ending the day slightly higher at Rs 104.95 a piece at the BSE.
The huge sell-off in DLF shares, presumably by retail as well as foreign and domestic institutional investors, led to a loss of Rs 7,438.67 crore in the company's market valuation, which stood at Rs 18,701.33 crore at the end of trade today.
Nearly 9 crore shares changed hands at the BSE and NSE during the day. The stock had fallen by nearly 4 per cent yesterday too.
Besides chairman and main promoter K P Singh, those barred from the markets include his son Rajiv Singh (Vice Chairman), daughter Pia Singh (Whole Time Director), Managing Director T C Goyal, former CFO Ramesh Sanka and former ED (Legal) Kameshwar Swarup.
While the regulator has not imposed any monetary penalty, the prohibition order would bar DLF and the six persons, from any sale, purchase or any other dealings in securities markets for a period of three years, including for raising funds.
DLF had over Rs 19,000 crore of debt as on June 30, 2014, while its already-proposed fund raising plans include nearly Rs 3,500 crore through issue of certain bonds to lower debts.
This is one of the rare orders by Sebi where it has barred a blue-chip firm and its top promoter/executives. The order can be challenged at Securities Appellate Tribunal.
DLF's IPO in 2007 had fetched Rs 9,187 crore -- the biggest IPO in the country at that time.
"Markets lost all their early gains instantly in reaction to Sebi's decision to ban DLF top management to access capital markets over the next 3 years. DLF, which is an index stock, corrected by over 27 per cent," said Rakesh Goyal, Senior Vice President, Bonanza Portfolio.
Led by the losses in these scrips, the BSE Realty index ended 9.24 per cent lower at 1,419.23, emerging as the biggest loser among the sectoral indices.
