Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

SBI Card finalises IPO price band at ₹750–755 per share

- Ridhima Saxena and Gopika Gopakumar

SBI CARD’S IPO WILL ALSO SEE US PRIVATE EQUITY FIRM CARLYLE GROUP REDUCE ITS STAKE IN THE COMPANY

MUMBAI: SBI Cards & Payment Services Ltd will sell shares in its initial public offering (IPO) next week at ₹750-755 per share which would also see US private equity firm Carlyle Group reduce its stake.

The offer, which opens on March 2 and is backed by the country’s largest lender State Bank of India, will also be the first share sale of 2020.

The IPO, which closes on March 5, comprises a fresh issue of ₹500 crore, while the offer for sale will see the promoters offload 130.52 million shares, the company said on Tuesday.

At the upper end of the price band, the SBI Card initial public offering would be valued at ₹10,341 crore, while its post-issue market capitalisa­tion will be up to ₹70,891 crore.

The secondary share sale will include up to 37.29 million share sale by SBI and up to 93.23 million shares on offer by Carlyle Group. SBI holds a 74% stake in SBI Card, while the rest is held by Carlyle.

They will pare their stakes by 4% and 10%, respective­ly, through the share sale. The offer also includes a reservatio­n of 1.84 million shares for eligible employees, while 13.05 million shares are set aside for State Bank of India (SBI) shareholde­rs.

The bids can be applied for a minimum of 19 shares and in its multiples thereafter.

Investment banks Axis Capital, Bofa Securities, Nomura and SBI Capital Markets are managing the initial public offering.

SBI Card started operations in 1998 as a joint venture with GE Capital Corp. In December 2017, GE Capital sold its 40% stake to state-run SBI and Carlyle.

The second-largest credit card issuer in the country, SBI Card sold 9.46 million credit cards, with an 18% market share in the domestic credit card market as on September 30.

HDFC Bank has the largest credit cards business in the country with 13.3 million cards issued, while ICICI Bank stood third with 7.9 million credit cards, as per data from the Reserve Bank of India.

The company sells a range of SBI Card-branded credit cards as well as co-branded credit cards to its 436.4 million customers, including individual cardholder­s and corporate clients.

NEW DELHI: India’s transit retail segment will grow from the current $2.2 billion to $21.6 billion by 2030, riding on healthy growth in passenger traffic and transport infrastruc­ture, internatio­nal property consultanc­y Knight Frank India said. A report, titled

projects healthy growth across various transport hubs, including airports, highways and bus stations, Metros and the railways over the next decade.

While the retailing potential is best tapped at airports at the moment, at Metros, highways and bus stations, it is still at a nascent stage, it said. A large part of the retail opportunit­y at transit hubs is currently untapped due to lack of retail infrastruc­ture at these nodes, the report said. The sector’s lease rental opportunit­y, which is currently at $1 billion, is estimated to grow to $3.2 billion by 2030, according to the report.

Further, the government can potentiall­y monetise these transit-oriented retail assets to generate funding of around $10 billion. Such monetizati­on will reduce the dependency on passenger tariffs and develop the retail ecosystem for a largely unexplored territory, besides opening up a new revenue stream for future infrastruc­ture developmen­t.

The report said transport terminals offer guaranteed footfalls daily.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India