Business Standard

Sebi issues guidelines for benchmarki­ng AIFS

Latest rule change may, however, clear decks for ~9,500-cr offering

- ASHLEY COUTINHO More on business-standard.com

The Securities and Exchange Board of India has issued guidelines for benchmarki­ng performanc­e of alternativ­e investment funds with a view to streamline disclosure standards and help investors in assessing scheme performanc­e.

Aregulator­y guideline introduced more than a decade ago has resulted in an inadverten­t delay in one of the most eagerly awaited public share sales.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has held back from giving its observatio­ns on the draft prospectus of SBI Cards and Payment Services, the credit card arm of State Bank of India (SBI). The offer document was filed with the regulator in November, and the company completed its global roadshows by early January, expecting to hit the market the same month.

However, the regulator kept the share sale in abeyance because of an ongoing probe against group company SBI Mutual Fund, said two people familiar with the matter.

The latter is contesting insider trading charges levelled against it for trading in the Manappuram Finance scrip. SBI MF was reportedly among five asset managers to whom Sebi had issued show cause notices last year for alleged use of pricesensi­tive informatio­n for trading in the scrip in March 2013.

“One of our group companies, SBI Funds Management Private Limited, is involved in proceeding­s initiated against it by Sebi… While Sebi had issued show cause notices, which have been responded to by SBI Funds, no order has yet been passed by Sebi in relation to such show cause notices,” SBI Cards’ draft offer noted.

According to a general order put out by Sebi in 2006, observatio­ns on draft offer documents would be kept in abeyance for a period of 90 days from the date of the show cause notice, or filing of the draft offer document — whichever is later.

The appropriat­e authority shall — in a fit case — pass an appropriat­e interim or final order after hearing the person affected, within the period of 90 days. Sebi tweaked the norms for holding back approvals for proposed share sales on Wednesday — putting in place a broader framework but doing away with the abeyance period in cases where show cause notices were issued to entities in an adjudicati­on proceeding.

It is unclear if the latest modificati­on will hasten SBI Cards’ approval timeline.

An email sent to SBI Cards, SBI MF, and Sebi did not elicit a response. People in the know said the observatio­ns may come this month.

Investment bankers say the delay will have no bearing on IPO prospects, which has got a stellar response from institutio­nal investors.

SBI Cards is targeting a mopup of ~9,500 crore from the share sale, with a fresh issue size of around ~500 crore. SBI and Carlyle Group are both divesting their holdings.

“This is the only stand-alone card business that is going to be listed and has the potential to generate superior ROE (return on equity). The market is underpenet­rated and we expect significan­t growth in the business. With the backing of SBI, there is a strong case for reaching out to the untapped segment,” said an investment banker.

According to brokerage reports, the share sale could command premium valuations, given the firm is a strong play on the consumptio­n and digitisati­on story.

Ambit Capital considers strong parentage and a good distributi­on network as its strengths and over-dependence on co-branded partners and an unsecured portfolio as weaknesses.

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