Business Standard

AIRTEL RIGHTS ENTITLEMEN­T COULD BE PRICED AT ~60-70: ANALYSTS

- SAMIE MODAK Mumbai, 30 August

Existing shareholde­rs of telecom major Bharti Airtel may be able to sell their rights entitlemen­t (RE) at ~60-70 per unit, according to analysts’ calculatio­n based on the current market price and rights issue price.

To be sure, the value of RE could change in the run-up to the issue allotment, depending on how the shares behave over the coming month.

Airtel on Sunday announced a fundraise of ~21,000 crore through rights issue, which is structured on the lines of the highly successful ~53,125-crore rights issue by rival Reliance Industries (RIL) last year.

The Sunil Mittal-led firm has set the rights issue price at ~532 per share, at a discount of 15 per cent to the last closing price of ~625 per share. The company is yet to announce the ex-date, RE trading window, and allotment timelines for the rights offering.

Like RIL, shareholde­rs participat­ing in Airtel’s rights issue programme will have to pay just 25 per cent of ~532 while applying. The remaining 75 per cent will be collected by the company in two or more calls at a later date that will be decided by it.

The company has set the rights entitlemen­t ratio at 1 for 14. In other words, those holding 14 shares of Airtel on the ex-date, will be eligible for one share under the rights programme. Shareholde­rs can either subscribe to partly paid up shares in the rights issue or sell their entitlemen­t under a special trading window that opens at the time of the rights issue.

Given the current price dynamics, analysts said, the price of one RE could be as much as ~70 per share.

“We expect Airtel RE to trade in the range of ~60-70 per share. This is because the existing shares trade at a 15 per cent premium to the rights issue price. It means the future calls are in-the-money. Those buying the RE will not just pay this difference but also a premium to subscribe to the balance 75 per cent at a discounted rate,” explained an analyst.

He said, last year, investors paid a huge premium in RIL’S RE trading window.

Market experts said for any partly paid rights issue to be successful, the existing shares have to trade at a premium to the rights issue price.

Passive funds to sell RE

Airtel is widely held by passive funds as the stock is part of various indices such as the Nifty, Sensex and also global

indices compiled by the MSCI and FTSE. Experts said such investors will be forced to sell Airtel shares as they are not allowed to hold partly paid up shares. This will provide a buying opportunit­y to retail as well as active fund managers, they added.

“As indices don’t permit to retain partly paid rights, passive managers will have to sell the renunciati­on forms (Rrforms) when the window for trading starts… Similar to RIL, Airtel partly paid up will offer holders an opportunit­y to hold the stock at lower value in the portfolio as against the fully paid up shares. The unpaid value on partly paid shares can be deployed elsewhere,” said Sriram Velayudhan, vice-president — alternativ­e research, Iifl-institutio­nal Equities, in a note.

Partly paid shares of Airtel will be listed and traded separately until the company exercises all the call options and the security gets converted into fully paid.

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