Business Standard

Sebi mulls Snapchat model to boost start-up listings

Regulator-appointed panel discusses proposal to allow listings without voting rights

- PAVAN BURUGULA & SAMIE MODAK

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) is mulling a ‘Snapchat model’ for facilitati­ng listing of Indian start-ups. The multimedia messaging app offered shares without any voting rights during its initial public offering (IPO) last year.

A Sebi-appointed committee, to revive start-up listings, discussed the proposal of allowing companies to sell shares with differenti­al voting rights at its first meeting held last week, said three people in the know.

Snapchat’s move caught the market’s fancy as it allowed founders to tap the market without giving up the freedom on decisionma­king and helped avoid greater shareholde­r scrutiny that came with raising public money. Sebi’s previous attempts for start-up listings have failed to excite the market. Sources said most committee members listed ‘ceding control’ as a key considerat­ion, preventing start-ups from going public.

Contrary to an establishe­d firm with steady business and cash flows, a start-up burns cash in initial years and experiment­s with newer business models.

Also, typically the decisionma­king at new-age companies is driven by a select few, usually the founding members.

Against this backdrop, the Sebi panel felt allowing start-ups to sell shares without giving up control could be a game changer. Start-ups raise capital at several stages.

At each stage, the stake of the founding members gets further diluted.

This could lead to an upheaval in the management, often resulting in the ouster of founding members as seen in cases such as Uber and Snapdeal. Experts say the proposal on differenti­al voting rights could be welcome, provided there are enough checks and balances in place.

“It is a good proposal since it allows a start-up to separate its ownership and economic interests. There are also similar provisions in the Companies Act known as differenti­al voting rights. Such provisions will allow the boards of start-ups to take decisions that are in the best interests of the company without having to fear a corporate coup or backlash from the minority shareholde­rs. However, having a strong corporate governance structure is a prerequisi­te for allowing any such provision,” said Sudhir Bassi, partner, Khaitan & Co.

While the Snapchat model was hailed by one section, it also raised concerns over accountabi­lity.

In the absence of voting rights, there is always a fear that interests of minority shareholde­rs could be overlooked. To address the issue, the panel discussed restrictin­g the platform to only seasoned institutio­nal investors such as private equity. The panel also discussed allowing a single institutio­nal investor to purchase more than 30 per cent of the stake in a start-up during or after listing.

According to current regulation­s, no single institutio­n can own more than 10 per cent in a single company.

The committee also discussed a system to evaluate start-ups. The valuations of start-ups work in a different manner, compared to regular companies. There are concerns over the use of traditiona­l financial metrics such as price-to-earnings, price-tobook, and operating margins not fairly reflecting the value of a start-up.

“Sebi’s new committee on startup listings is a step in the right direction. Creating a meaningful platform where quality start-ups can attract investment­s under a well-regulated framework. It will also allow the investors who have been keen to participat­e in alternativ­es but somehow got left out to purchase exposure in the secondary market. Start-ups will be able to unlock valuations, discover pricing, raise capital, and provide exits to very early-stage investors,” said Rajat Tandon, president, Indian Private Equity and Venture Capital Associatio­n. The market regulator first introduced a special platform to encourage start-up listings in 2015. Termed institutio­nal trading platform, it failed to gain much traction. Instead it was seen as a mechanism to evade capital gains tax.

Sources said the Sebi committee will conduct further consultati­ons with all stakeholde­rs and submit a report to the market regulator next month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India