Business Standard

Sebi to make listing start-ups attractive

Definition widened to include non-tech firms; companies will be able to list directly on the main board of the bourses

- ASHLEY COUTINHO

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) may soon bring in a slew of changes to make it attractive for start-ups to list on the bourses.

Among other things, the regulator may broaden the definition of start-ups to include nontech companies and allow them to list directly on the main board of stock exchanges under a separate segment.

The changes are part of the proposals prepared by a Sebi-appointed panel to revive start-up listings. The regulator is expected to take a final call on these proposals later this month.

The regulatory framework for institutio­nal trading platform (ITP) was announced on August 14, 2015, to enable listing of new-age and technologi­cally intensive companies in sectors such as e-commerce, data analytics and bio- and nano-technology. Subsequent­ly, Sebi came up with recommenda­tions to make the platform more accessible via a discussion paper on July 29, 2016.

The platform, however, has failed to take off. “ITP was perceived to be an inferior platform. The aim now is to facilitate the listing of start-ups under a separate segment that is part of the main board itself,” said a person who was part of the committee that forwarded its proposals to Sebi. Existing rules allow companies trading on the ITP to migrate to the main board after a period of three years. The person added that the ITP nomenclatu­re may be done away with and the final contours of the platform will be deliberate­d by the exchanges.

Under ITP, the minimum applicatio­n size is ~1 million and the number of allottees or investors have to be more than 200. The committee has suggested Changes part of proposals prepared by a Sebi-appointed panel to revive start-up listings

The regulatory framework for institutio­nal trading platform has been a non-starter so far

Number of allottees and applicatio­n size to be reduced significan­tly

that the number of allottees be brought below 100 and the minimum applicatio­n size be slashed to a much lower number. “By doing this, the amount of capital a company can raise becomes significan­tly lower and a lot more companies in need of early-stage funding can tap the platform,” said the person quoted above.

The definition of institutio­nal investors may now be expanded to include venture capital funds registered outside India, angel networks and angel groups. The ITP rule restricted institutio­nal investors to qualified institutio­nal buyers (QIBs), family trusts and systematic­allyimport­ant NBFCs.

The committee wants the criteria for minimum dilution Minimum dilution criteria for promoter group may be reduced

of the promoter group to be set at 10 per cent at the time of listing to give greater control to the promoters.

According to current norms, a shareholde­r can hold a maximum of 25 per cent of the post issue capital in a start-up. “Founder-promoters may not like their holdings to drop to 25 per cent or below, at least in the initial stage. Seed or VC investors, in fact, would want to own more than 25 per cent in start-ups,” said another person who was part of the discussion­s to make listings attractive for startups. At least 75 per cent of the initial public offering for startups is currently reserved for QIBs and the rest for noninstitu­tional investors.

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