Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Retail investors make a dash for LIC’S IPO on Day 1

- Swaraj Singh Dhanjal

ON THE FIRST DAY, POLICYHOLD­ERS, EMPLOYEES AND RETAIL INVESTORS OF LIC SUBSCRIBED TO 67% OF THE SHARES ON SALE

MUMBAI: India’s biggest initial public offering received a robust response, with retail investors placing bids for nearly twothirds of the life insurer’s shares on offer on the first day of the share sale despite a selloff.

On Wednesday, Life Insurance Corp. (LIC) of India policyhold­ers, who are eligible for a discount on the sale price, employees and other retail investors subscribed to 67% of the shares on sale.

Strong demand for the shares came on a day the benchmark indices Sensex, and Nifty fell 2.29% each after a surprise interest rate hike by the Reserve Bank of India.

The portion of the share sale reserved for policyhold­ers saw the strongest demand on the first day, with the segment getting subscribed 1.99 times. The retail investor portion was subscribed 58%, while the portion reserved for institutio­nal investors and high net-worth individemp­loyees uals were subscribed 33% and 26%, respective­ly, according to data from stock exchanges. Shares reserved for LIC employees were subscribed 1.1 times.

The LIC share sale ends on 9 May, running longer than other initial share sales, which are open for three days. Subscripti­on to the share sale will also be open on Saturday, May 7. The shares will debut on stock exchanges on May 17.

The Indian government is offloading a 3.5% stake in LIC for ₹21,000 crore. Earlier on Monday, LIC raised ₹5,627 crore by selling shares to so-called anchor investors.

The price band for the share sale has been fixed at ₹902-949 apiece. Retail investors and LIC have been offered a discount of ₹45 per share, while policyhold­ers have been offered a discount of ₹60 per share.

The strong demand from policyhold­ers and retail investors is in line with the trend witnessed in the anchor subscripti­on segment, where domestic institutio­nal investors made substantia­l bids. Domestic mutual funds subscribed to 74% of the share offered in the anchor allocation, even as foreign institutio­nal investors’ participat­ion was tepid, subscribin­g to just 17.7% of the anchor allocation.

Domestic mutual fund purchases were led by SBI Funds Management, ICICI Prudential Asset Management and HDFC Asset Management Co. Overseas investors included BNP Investment­s, Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global and the government of Singapore. While the government planned to sell 5% of LIC initially, the issue size was reduced to 3.5% and the valuation lowered to ₹6 lakh crore as markets turned volatile.

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