Business Standard

INFOSYS ON LIC ‘BUY LIST’

- SAMIE MODAK & SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

Turmoil-hit Infosys is on the “buy list” of Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India (LIC) for this month,

according to a senior official at the insurance company. On Friday, the stock ended at ~923, down 9.6 per cent over its previous close of ~1,021. It had hit an intra-day low of ~884.4. More than ~7,600 crore worth of shares had changed hands on the NSE and ~750 crore on the BSE. A day later, Infosys’ board had approved a ~13,000-crore share buyback at ~1,150 per share. This was at a 24.6 per cent premium to its last closing price. SAMIE MODAK & SHRIMI CHOUDHARY >

Turmoil-hit Infosys is on the “buy list” of Life Insurance Corporatio­n of India (LIC) for this month, according to a senior official at the country’s largest insurance company.

“We have a process-driven investment approach. Infosys has made it to our ‘buy list’ for this month. We will continue to buy shares of the company,” the official said. He said LIC bought “a few thousand shares” on Friday, when the stock dropped as much as 13 per cent due to the uncertaint­y created by the resignatio­n of Vishal Sikka from the post of managing director and chief executive officer.

On Friday, the stock ended at ~923, down 9.6 per cent over previous close of ~1,021. It had hit an intra-day low of ~884.2 and more than ~7,600 crore worth of shares had changed hands at the NSE counter and another ~750 crore at the BSE.

A day later, the Infosys board approved a ~13,000-crore share buyback at ~1,150 per share. This was at 24.6 per cent premium to Infosys’ last closing price. The LIC official said the buyback price is “attractive” and they “would soon take a decision” on how many shares the company would want to tender in the repurchase programme. The buyback timeline will be announced after the resolution is put for shareholde­r voting.

LIC is the largest institutio­nal shareholde­r in Infosys with a seven per cent stake, followed by Oppenheime­rFunds, which has 2.16 per cent stake and Singapore government’s GIC, with 2.11 per cent stake, according to the June quarter shareholdi­ng data provided by the BSE. HDFC Mutual Fund and ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund, the country’s largest fund houses, hold two per cent and 1.5 per cent, respective­ly.

Most investors Business Standard spoke to said they were closely monitoring the developmen­ts. Being a large stock in the benchmark Sensex and the Nifty indices, the stock is owned by a large number of institutio­nal shareholde­rs and exchange-traded funds. “We are yet to hear from the Infosys management. In the interest of all the shareholde­rs, we want the issue to be resolved at the earliest. We are not happy with the way things have been handled at Infosys. However, it is too early to decide if we would switch our investment to other technology companies,” the LIC official said.

Shares of rival Tata Consultanc­y Services (TCS) had gained 1.32 per cent on Friday as some investors switched from Infosys, according to some market players. “After the latest correction, the stock has become attractive on the valuation front. We might consider buying shares from the open market and tendering some in the buyback. Given the uncertain phase the IT industry is going through, we cannot expect a big bounce in the shares. The buyback is a good opportunit­y to cash out some of our existing holdings,” said a fund manager.

The acceptance ratio for non-retail shareholde­rs is likely to be tiny as the buyback amounts for only 4.96 per cent of the paid up equity share capital of the company. Retail shareholde­rs (those holding less than ~2 lakh worth of shares) can expect a better acceptance ratio as they would have reservatio­ns for 15 per cent of the buyback amount.

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