UBS expects record IPO year for India despite Covid-19 crisis, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Baiju Kalesh

India’s sharp surge in Covid-19 cases will not prevent the country’s markets from setting a record for initial public offerings in 2021, as a cohort of technology companies make their much-anticipated debuts later in the year, according to UBS Group AG.

Last year companies amassed $4.6 billion from IPOs, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, and Anuj Kapoor, head of investment banking at UBS India, believes the figure will be easily eclipsed.

“I would say we will surpass twice the money we raised in 2020 through IPOs,” Kapoor said.

Before the arrival of the coronavirus pandemic’s second wave, India’s markets were full of optimism. So far in 2021, IPOs in India have raised nearly $3 billion, the best start to the year since 2018, the data show. The activity was aided by ample liquidity, with foreign investors as well as retail stock-pickers looking for new ideas to invest in, Kapoor said.

The latest outbreak of Covid-19 cases has had a serious impact on the equities market, and there has been a decoupling of Indian versus global markets since March, Kapoor said. The benchmark Sensex index has risen 2.2% this year, compared to the 9.3% gain year to date in the MSCI World index.

Overseas investors sold $1.4 billion worth of Indian stocks in the month to April 29, the biggest monthly outflow since March last year when the nation imposed one of the strictest lockdowns in the world to curb the spread of the pandemic.

“We will see a few more tough weeks ahead before Covid-19 plateaus and starts declining,” said Kapoor, who is also on the board of UBS India. “Hopefully, this should not linger beyond June.”

Kapoor expects tech companies to start hitting the market in the second half of the year. He predicts fewer than five will list this year, however that figure could more than double in 2022.

Online food delivery startup Zomato Ltd. recently filed its initial prospectus with the regulator for an IPO that could raise as much as 82.5 billion rupees ($1.1 billion). Other tech-based businesses waiting in the wings include cosmetics retailer Nykaa E-Retail Pvt and insurance aggregator Policybazaar, Bloomberg News has reported.

On the mergers and acquisitions front, Kapoor sees more deal activity from local companies and foreign players buying Indian firms than in domestic firms targeting assets overseas.

Global private equity funds have a strong interest in the health-care and pharmaceutical sectors, he said. Last year saw KKR & Co. buy a majority stake in J.B. Chemicals & Pharmaceuticals Ltd. in a $371.3 million deal that completed in November. A month earlier, Carlyle Group Inc. closed a transaction to acquire a 20% interest in Piramal Pharma Ltd. for $466 million.

Locally, some of the largest investors in tech companies will push the firms toward consolidation.

“We are going to see this theme play out as business models mature,” he said. He also sees combinations occurring in areas such as financial services.

Kapoor’s bullishness stems from his unit’s performance in 2020, UBS’s best year ever in India by revenue, driven primarily by equities activity, he said. The firm added new junior banker roles in March, and will recruit talent judiciously, he said.

“This year we will have a healthy mix of capital markets and M&A,” he said. “2021 should be better for deal activity than 2020.”



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SBI Research cuts India’s GDP estimates for FY22, sees peak of Covid 2.0 in May, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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NEW DELHI: Economists at India’s largest bank have cut the FY22 GDP growth projection for the economy by 60 basis points, and said India could have done better to tackle the second wave of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The downgrading of growth projections was triggered largely due to restrictions being imposed by different states.

“India managed the first wave of pandemic well. However, the country is now facing an unprecedented second wave. There is no doubt India could have done better,” said economists at SBI.

The second wave of Covid-19 pandemic has shattered all records. The number of active cases crossed the 30 lakh mark for the first time since the beginning of the pandemic. In the past 24 hours, 3.79 lakh fresh cases and 3,596 deaths were reported in the country, highest for a single day.

With rising cases, the recovery rate of Covid-19 patients has also plummeted sharply from 97 per cent at the beginning of the second wave to 82.5 per cent now. This 14.5 per cent drop in recovery rate has happened over the past 69 days.

However, SBI is sensing “good news amidst all the gloom” and believes the peak of the pandemic is near.

“Given that every 1 per cent reduction in recovery rate takes around 4.5 days, it translates into around 20 days from now. Also, our estimate shows every 1 per cent reduction in recovery rate increases active cases by 1.85 lakhs. Thus we believe the peak of the second wave would come around mid-May with active cases reaching around 36 lakh at that point,” the economists wrote.

The economists say they have started noticing some deeper impact of the second wave on economic activity in the country. Its business activity index in April dipped to a new low level of 75.7, a level last attained in August 2020.

This indicates the disruption caused by increased restrictions imposed in various states. All the indicators, except for labour participation and electricity consumption have declined significantly during April.

“Given the current circumstances of partial/local/weekend lockdowns in almost all states, our growth forecast is now revised downwards. SBI’ revised FY22 growth projection now stands at 10.4 per cent for real GDP and 14.2 per cent for nominal GDP,” the economists said.

Earlier, SBI had projected real GDP growth for FY22 at 11 per cent (RBI:10.5 per cent) and nominal GDP at 15 per cent (Union Budget: 14.4 per cent) on the back of a low base effect and renewed economic momentum.

Total loss due to the second wave lockdowns is estimated at Rs 1.86 lakh crore, of which Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka and Rajasthan account for 75 per cent. Maharashtra’s loss alone stands at 43 per cent.

Vaccine as public good
SBI advocated declaring Covid-19 vaccine as a public good, which it believes is the only way to fight this dreadful pandemic. In economic parlance, ‘public goods’ are defined as non-excludable and nonrival in nature.

“The primary idea of a public good is that agents must cooperate and not be combative, and then only all the players will have the opportunity to get a better payoff…When both Centre and state government cooperate with each other, both will receive benefit in the form of more vaccination, better medical facilities, and less number of cases. When both [are non-cooperative], the payoffs will be zero for both,” said SBI economists.

In the last couple of months, there have been instances when some states and central government have tussled over managing the pandemic, with each blaming the other for any mishaps.

The bank said for the 20 states it analysed, the cost of vaccines is almost 10-15 per cent of their health expenditure budget, assuming half of the population in these states will get vaccinated by the central government.

This cost is, however, only 0.1 per cent of GDP and much lower than the economic loss if restrictions occur to control the spread of pandemic which is already around 0.8 per cent of GDP.

SBI Research cuts India’s GDP estimates for FY22, sees peak of Covid 2.0 in MaySBI also cast doubt on the criticism that elections were responsible for faster spread of the virus. Many analysts and epidemiologists believe that the elections were one of the major factors behind the record cases in election states.

“In some states like Maharashtra, Delhi and Chhattisgarh, even as mobility has declined significantly, cases increased and they have shown some stabilization only recently, indicating the transmission may not be possible only through humans, but it is airborne. This makes a strong case mass sanitisation of public places for disinfection,” said SBI.



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