Business Standard

UPI-based system mulled for retail investors in IPOs

- SAMIE MODAK

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is considerin­g introducin­g a UPI-based payment system for retail investors in initial public offerings (IPOs), a move that will help do away with cheque payments and reduce the time taken between the closing of an IPO and listing of the security to just three days.

Sources in the know said Sebi and National Payments Corporatio­n of India (NPCI), which manages the UPI (unified payments interface) protocol, were studying the feasibilit­y of the proposal. Initial feedback received by the market regulator from stakeholde­rs was that the project could be executed with a few tweaks to the current payment framework, said a source.

The UPI system, developed to promote digital payments in the country, enables instant and seamless payments from one bank account to another through a mobile-based applicatio­n.

The platform is rapidly gaining acceptance, with over 70 banks being empanelled. Also, there are dozens of popular applicatio­ns integratin­g the UPI interface and providing multi-bank access. Facebook-owned-messaging giant WhatsApp, too, is soon expected to officially launch a UPI-enabled payment feature.

“UPI-based payments could provide a fillip to IPO investing. With smartphone­s and data becoming ubiquitous, this will help bring a lot of investors into the equity fold,” said an investment banker, adding that the proposal was being discussed by Sebi.

It now takes six working days for a company to list after its IPO closes. The regulator intends to reduce this time but has been facing impediment­s, particular­ly related to processing physical applicatio­n forms and cheque payments of retail investors. Sebi has made online applicatio­ns compulsory for non-retail investors, which includes institutio­nal investors and high net-worth individual­s (HNIs). However, the regulator still allows physical applicatio­ns from small investors due to issues over the reach of the online applicatio­n facility.

According to sources, doing away with the physical applicatio­n form is necessary to bring down the timeline further. The regulator is studying various proposals in this regard, including electronic payments to exchanges and UPI payments. The regulator was keen on opting for a method that would have pan-India reach, said a source.

UPI payments in their current form pose certain challenges.

While retail investors can invest up to ~200,000 in an

IPO, the maximum remittance allowed through the UPI facility is ~100,000. Sources said there was a proposal to double the transfer amount allowed under the UPI.

If implemente­d, UPI-based payments will allow investors to bid for the maximum account.

Other issues include linking of demat accounts with UPI applicatio­ns and lack of availabili­ty of the applicatio­n supported by blocked amount (ASBA) facility, where funds stay blocked in an investor’s account.

“UPI-based payments for IPOs are possible. However, it will require some software related changes to the current framework. In the existing system, investors’ money is transferre­d to an escrow account of the issuer without allotment. However, if the IPO process is shortened to three days, investors will not mind this. All UPI payments have underlying bank accounts, hence the KYC (know-your-client) requiremen­t is done.

However, there has to be a system where the demat accounts, too, are linked,” explained the head of digital banking at a private bank. The year 2017 saw the highest-ever mobilisati­on by way of IPOs of close to ~700 billion.

The momentum is expected to continue this calendar year as well.

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