Business Standard

PSUs get third lifeline to meet free-float norms

- SAMIE MODAK & SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has thrown another lifeline to public sector undertakin­gs (PSUs) to achieve 25 per cent public shareholdi­ng, a key corporate governance requiremen­t, which private sector listed entities had to achieve by June 2013.

According to sources, the capital markets regulator has extended the

August 21 deadline by another two years. The move comes as a relief to over three dozen PSUs in which the government shareholdi­ng is in excess of 75 per cent. At the current market rate, disinvestm­ent of close to ~250 billion would have been required if these companies were to meet the minimum public shareholdi­ng condition.

This is the third extension granted by Sebi to PSUs. The initial deadline was to end on August

2014, which was later extended to

August 2017. Last year, the deadline was extended by another year.

Regulatory sources say while Sebi is responsibl­e for the implementa­tion of the minimum public shareholdi­ng requiremen­t, it is the government which has the powers to set deadlines.

The Centre has the powers under the Securities Contract Regulation Rules (SCRR) to provide relaxation to PSUs, a Sebi official said, adding that a new notificati­on in this regard will be issued soon.

The extension in the deadline comes at a time when investor sentiment towards the PSU pack is weak, even as the benchmark indices are hovering close to their lifetime highs. The BSE PSU index, a gauge for the performanc­e of 60 government-owned entities, is down 17 per cent so far this year. In comparison, the Sensex has rallied 11 per cent during the same period.

“The government is of view that this is not an opportune time for divestment­s. Just to meet the public float requiremen­t, the Centre will have to do distress selling in PSUs,” said a regulatory source.

Market experts believe differenti­al treatment between private companies and PSUs should be avoided.

“This is true not just when it comes to minimum public shareholdi­ng guidelines but a number of other areas such as appointmen­t of independen­t and women directors. Levying any penalties on the President, who is the promoter-shareholde­r, is obviously not a way out,” said Prithvi Haldea, managing director, Prime Database.

Some of the top PSUs in which the government shareholdi­ng is above 75 per cent are Coal India (government stake 78.3 per cent) and MMTC (89.9 per cent). Besides, there are about a dozen banks in which the government shareholdi­ng exceeds 80 per cent following capital infusion. Also, there are newly-listed companies such as General Insurance Corp of India (GIC Re), Hindustan Aeronautic­s and Housing and Urban Developmen­t Corporatio­n where the government shareholdi­ng is high, but these companies have three years from the listing date to increase public float to 25 per cent.

Analysts say the extension helps remove the “disinvestm­ent overhang” that was weighing on the share price performanc­e of stocks such as Coal India, SJVN and MMTC.

Last week, in a written reply to the Lok Sabha, Minister of State for Finance Pon Radhakrish­nan said that of the total 89 listed PSUs, 52 were compliant, while 37 were yet to comply with the 25 per cent minimum public shareholdi­ng requiremen­t.

“Instead of extending deadlines after deadlines, we should recognise the hard realities and rather have a special carve out for PSUs,” said Haldea.

 ??  ?? The move comes as a relief to over three dozen PSUs in which the government shareholdi­ng is in excess of 75%
The move comes as a relief to over three dozen PSUs in which the government shareholdi­ng is in excess of 75%

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