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“The uncertainty in India’s IPO market is expected to remain at least for the next two to three months, depending on how the geopolitical crisis plays out,” said Prashant Singhal, partner and India markets leader at EY.
Meanwhile, the market sell-off in March and a foggy outlook prompted influential institutional investors – usually anchors of IPOs – to push back companies on valuations. “There is a mismatch in valuation expectations of issuers and investors,” said Nilesh Shah, managing director at Kotak Mutual Fund. “Issuers want the pre-war valuation. Investors want post-war valuation. As soon as east meets west, activity will pick up.”
Data from Prime Database revealed a robust IPO pipeline. As of April 17, as many as 146 companies have received Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) approval to raise a total of ₹2.11 lakh crore.
AgenciesValuation Discipline
Of this, approvals of 43 companies are valid only till September. Another 84 companies are awaiting approval to collectively raise ₹1.75 lakh crore.
Valuation discipline is becoming more prominent, with greater emphasis now being placed on pricing relative to fundamentals, said Swarup Mohanty, vice chairman and chief executive at Mirae Asset Mutual Fund.
In the current scenario, prospective IPO issuers are also taking a pause to frame their offer documents on March-end audited financials, which offer a longer validity period, said investment bankers.”December audited numbers are valid only till June; hence most issuers prefer March financials in the document as they are valid till September,” said Dharmesh Mehta, MD and CEO, DAM Capital Advisors. “One should expect IPO launches starting in June, by then, hopefully, the global volatility will settle down.”
Sebi rules allow companies to go public only with up to six-month old financial data. IPO-bound firms with December quarter as the latest earnings data period in their draft red herring prospectus must launch their IPOs by June.
The market regulator earlier this month gave these companies a one-time relaxation, extending the validity of its IPO approvals in a bid to ease fundraising pressures. It said clearances expiring between April 1 and September 30 will now remain valid until September 30.
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https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/ipos/fpos/firms-postpone-d-street-debut-as-uncertainty-clouds-market-outlook/articleshow/130566871.cms




