Business Standard

CENTRE GETS ~14,500 CR FROM BHARAT-22 ETF

Govt ~20,000 crore short of disinvestm­ent target with four months of FY18 left

- ARUP ROYCHOUDHU­RY

The government’s Bharat-22 exchangetr­aded fund (ETF) has garnered ~14,500 crore, officials said on Monday. With this, the Centre’s divestment proceeds for 2017-18 have reached ~52,500 cr ore, ~20,000 crore short of this year’s budgeted estimate of ~72,500 crore.

The government’s Bharat-22 exchange traded fund (ETF) has garnered ~14,500 crore, officials said on Monday.

With this, the Centre’s disinvestm­ent proceeds for 2017-18 has reached ~52,500 crore, higher than the 2016-17 revised estimate of ~45,500 crore, and ~20,000 crore short of this year’s budgeted estimate of ~72,500 crore. Four more months are still left for the financial year to end.

The new fund offer of (NFO) of Bharat ETF was subscribed four times and saw demand worth nearly ~32,500 crore, Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) Secretary Neeraj Gupta said in a media briefing.

While the initial amount to be raised through the ETF was fixed at ~8,000 crore, the Centre decided to increase the size to ~14,500 crore, mostly to accommodat­e retail investors and pension funds, Gupta said. “The overwhelmi­ng response for Bharat 22 shows that there is a lot of confidence in the India growth story, and demonstrat­es the belief in the reforms being undertaken across sectors.”

The portion reserved for retail investors was subscribed 1.45 times, while the portion for institutio­nal investor was subscribed seven times. All the investors who applied in the NFO were given a discount of three per cent over the market reference rate, Gupta said.

The Bharat-22 ETF has companies from six sectors. The constituen­ts of the basket are Nalco, ONGC, IndianOil, Bharat Petroleum, Coal India, State Bank of India, Axis Bank, Bank of Baroda, Rural Electrific­ation Corp, Power Finance Corp, Indian Bank, ITC, Larsen & Toubro, Bharat Electrical­s, Engineers India, NBCC, PowerGrid, NTPC, Gail India, NHPC, NLC India and SJVN Ltd. This compares with 10 stocks in the first CPSE ETF, launched in early 2014, and drawing mostly from the energy space.

The Bharat-22 ETF has been the biggest share sale by the government this fiscal year, followed by the ~11,500-crore initial public offering (IPO) of General Insurance Corporatio­n of India, and ~9,600-crore IPO of New India Assurance.

In the backdrop of expected tax revenue shortfall of ~20,000 crore due to revisions in goods and service tax rates, the finance minister would increasing­ly depend on revenue heads like disinvestm­ent to adhere to a strict fiscal deficit target for 2017-18. And by all accounts, for the first time since 2009- 10, stake sale proceeds might exceed the budgeted estimate.

The year’s total budgeted disinvestm­ent target of ~72,500 crore is the highest for any fiscal year. On tap is stateowned energy behemoth ONGC’s acquisitio­n of HPCL that could give the exchequer more than ~30,000 crore. There are still a number of initial public offerings, offer-for-sales, and buybacks which the Centre could fall back on.

DIPAM is working with defence and rail ministries on a number of market debuts, including that of IRCTC, IRFC, IRCON, Hindustan Aeronautic­s, Garden Reach Shipbuilde­rs, Bharat Dynamics and Mazagaon Dockyards. For the rest of the year, DIPAM is working on offerfor-sale proposals, said government sources. It is planning to offload 10 per cent stake in NHPC, Power Finance Corporatio­n and SAIL, 15 per cent in NLC, five per cent in Rural Electrific­ation Corporatio­n and three per cent in IndianOil. It has already sold a 7 per cent stake in NTPC in August.

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Source: Bloomberg
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Source: indiabudge­t.nic.in *so far, according to DIPAM Secretary

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