Standard Chartered Plc On Monday managed to rope in six anchor investors for its Rs 2,400 -2,760 crore Indian Depository Receipts (IDR) that are to be issued in the Indian market.
It would raise Rs 370 crore from issuing 36 million IDRs to six mutual funds at a price of Rs 104 per IDR. While Reliance Mutual Fund bought 10.57 million IDRs, ICICI (ICICIBANK.NS : 809.35 -22.75) Prudential AMC bought 9.61 million, HDFC AMC 6.03 million, Franklin Templeton MF 4.80 million, Birla Sun Life AMC 3.55 million and Sundaram BNP Paribas 1.40 million IDRs.
The company had fixed the price band for the issue in the range of Rs 100 - 115 per IDR, hoping to raise up to Rs 2,760 crore at the upper end of the price band. The company had reserved around 30% of the QIB (Qualified Institutional Buyers), including mutual funds, to be allocated to anchor investors on a discretionary basis.
Interestingly, among all categories of investors, only mutual funds have been exempt from any kind of taxation - be it short-term or long-term capital gains tax.
Of the total issue size, 30% have been reserved for retail investors, while not more than 18% of the issue has been reserved for high net-worth individuals. Retail investors have been offered a 5% discount to the final issue price that will be finalised later through the book-building process.
Standard Chartered is the first overseas entity to raise funds from the Indian market through the issue of IDR. Ten IDRs will be equal to one share of the bank, whose shares are listed already on the London and Hong Kong stock exchange.
It would raise Rs 370 crore from issuing 36 million IDRs to six mutual funds at a price of Rs 104 per IDR. While Reliance Mutual Fund bought 10.57 million IDRs, ICICI (ICICIBANK.NS : 809.35 -22.75) Prudential AMC bought 9.61 million, HDFC AMC 6.03 million, Franklin Templeton MF 4.80 million, Birla Sun Life AMC 3.55 million and Sundaram BNP Paribas 1.40 million IDRs.
The company had fixed the price band for the issue in the range of Rs 100 - 115 per IDR, hoping to raise up to Rs 2,760 crore at the upper end of the price band. The company had reserved around 30% of the QIB (Qualified Institutional Buyers), including mutual funds, to be allocated to anchor investors on a discretionary basis.
Interestingly, among all categories of investors, only mutual funds have been exempt from any kind of taxation - be it short-term or long-term capital gains tax.
Of the total issue size, 30% have been reserved for retail investors, while not more than 18% of the issue has been reserved for high net-worth individuals. Retail investors have been offered a 5% discount to the final issue price that will be finalised later through the book-building process.
Standard Chartered is the first overseas entity to raise funds from the Indian market through the issue of IDR. Ten IDRs will be equal to one share of the bank, whose shares are listed already on the London and Hong Kong stock exchange.
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