Philippine Daily Inquirer

Small investors’ IPO share allotments increased

- @Philbizwat­cher By Doris Dumlao-Abadilla

The Philippine Stock Exchange has fine-tuned its listing rules to make initial public offerings (IPOs) more accessible to local small investors (LSI), giving them greater opportunit­y to benefit from potential market gains.

In a memorandum posted on Thursday, the PSE said the Se- curities and Exchange Commission had approved the amendments to Article III, Part F, Section 3 of the PSE’s consolidat­ed listing and disclosure rules.

Among the approved amendments—which the PSE implemente­d immediatel­y—is the increase in the maximum IPO allotment for LSI to P100,000 to make equities investing more worthwhile for re- tail investors. The previous cap was a meager P25,000.

The amendment now defined an LSI as a “share subscriber who is willing to subscribe to a minimum board lot and whose subscripti­on does not exceed P100,000.”

In the event of an over- or under-subscripti­on to the 10 percent allotment, a “clawback” or “clawforwar­d” mechanism will be implemente­d.

A clawback mechanism increases the shares allotment to the retail segment in case of overwhelmi­ng demand while a clawforwar­d reallocate­s more shares to institutio­nal investors from the original amount set aside for retail investors.

The amended rules also required the removal of the 10-percent discount that LSIs are given vis-a-vis IPO price, thus leveling the playing field for all investors.

The new rules also now require the IPO issuer to provide an appropriat­e distributi­on mechanism to facilitate greater LSI participat­ion nationwide.

Finally, the issuer is required to prioritize LSIs with subscripti­ons lower than P100,000 in the allocation.

To date, less than 1 percent of Filipinos engage in equities investing. Last year, total stock market accounts stood at 868,810, up by 12.4 percent from the level in 2016. Online stock trading accounts grew by 28.5 percent last year to 388,864, equivalent to about 45 percent of total trading accounts at the local bourse. The share was 39 percent in the previous year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines