What you learn from IRCTC’s dizzying journey

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Stocks of Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) in India are generally held to be boring bets for investors, given that they operate in old economy businesses, rarely go in for exciting corporate moves such as new business forays, buyouts or mergers, and faithfully maintain a high dividend yield by coughing up payouts at their promoter’s behest.

But Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation (IRCTC), the monopoly ticketing arm of Indian Railways, has behaved in a very non-PSU like fashion right from its IPO in October 2019. With the offer made at a throwaway price of ₹320, the share more than doubled on listing and was up fourfold within fifteen months, scaling ₹1400 by January 2021.

A dizzying rise….

It had good reason to do so. Though two waves of Covid had battered IRCTC’s revenues and profits in FY21 to a third of FY20 levels, IRCTC continued to seed new revenue streams during the pandemic.

It flagged off hotel, bus and airline ticketing services, launched domestic and international tour packages, debuted its own payment gateway and scaled up its insurance and co-branded credit card business, while bidding for private train routes put on block by the Railways. It also took the first steps towards monetising its mammoth 6 crore user base with cross-selling and advertising.

This helped the investor community forget its pathological aversion to PSUs, to imagine a rosy future for IRCTC. The stock’s PE scaled three digits as analysts modelled a fivefold bounce in its earnings by FY23. This was based on the Railways getting back to business-as-usual (which would restore IRCTC’s internet ticketing, catering and bottled water revenues) and adding to its bottomline from its nascent new businesses. Talk of new ticketing opportunities from AC 3 coaches and the pricing power enjoyed by IRCTC on convenience fees added to its bull case, helping the stock’s pricey PE of 150-200 times in mid-2021, scale dizzying heights of over 320 times by October 2021, prompting entertaining Twitter face-offs between IRCTC fans and haters.

And a sharp setback

But if private promoters in this situation would have done everything to keep the rosy narrative going, PSUs’ promoter – the Indian government – works in mysterious ways. A stock exchange intimation by IRCTC post-market hours on October 28 blandly intimating that the Ministry of Railways had ‘decided’ to ‘share’ 50 per cent of IRCTC’s convenience fees from November, dealt a nasty surprise to its fans.

Though internet ticketing brought in just 27 per cent of its revenues in FY20 and sharing it would deprive it of just ₹150-300 crore a year in convenience fees (depending on one’s forecast for FY23/24), ticketing is IRCTC’s key margin-generator accounting for over three-fourths of its earnings. A lot of the bullish narrative around an expanding profit pool for the company was also built around its ticketing business.

The filing therefore prompted sell-side analysts to burn the midnight oil to revise their excel models. Overnight IRCTC found its FY23/24 earnings projections lowered by 25-30 per cent, with a sharp PE de-rating predicted.

Stock price action on Friday did not disappoint the bears, with the stock losing 25 per cent shortly after opening to a post-split price of ₹639, erasing nearly ₹20,000 crore in market cap. Even as this prompted some teeth-gnashing about the Government’s folly in giving up ₹13,000 crore of market wealth (it owns 67 per cent) to gain ₹150-300 crore in revenue, pre-noon parleys between the company and the Railway Board seemed to yield results. By 11 am, business channels were beaming ‘breaking news’ on the Railway Ministry changing its mind, with the Secretary of DIPAM (earlier the disinvestment ministry) confirming that the Railways Ministry has rethought its decision. This caused the stock to forge an equally steep climb.

Lessons

The IRCTC saga reiterates some age-old learnings about PSU stocks that makes seasoned investors very choosy about them.

One, the left hand of the government may not know what the right hand is doing. Even if the Centre is a majority stake-holder in a listed PSU, the Ministry controlling it may make shareholder-unfriendly moves that prioritise its own interests over that of the shareholders.

Two, Government monopolies, unlike private monopolies, often do not have pricing power. They operate at the mercy of their respective ministries, which may prioritise social good or political popularity over shoring up the profits of the PSU. The losing battle that activist UK fund The Children’s Investment Fund fought with Coal India, about government interference in its pricing decisions and NMDC’s inability to fully cash in on global iron ore rallies, are evidence of this. IRCTC’s own convenience fees and the Railways’ share in it have been altered quite often in the past. Pre-listing, the Ministry of Railways used to share IRCTC’s convenience fees 50:50. Just before its IPO, the Centre took a decision to ‘waive’ IRCTC’s fee completely, decimating a key revenue and profit source. The fee was later partly restored post listing. Even last year, the Railways’ changing policies on catering contracts have raised doubts on the sustainability of IRCTC’s catering profits. The latest fee-sharing saga should therefore prompt IRCTC fans to keep the promoter risk in mind, while modelling earnings and according eye-watering valuations to the stock.

Three, despite the Centre’s keenness to divest, Ministries in it often prove clueless about the concept of corporate governance that requires giving minority shareholders a fair deal post-listing. Ministry bosses often continue to look upon listed PSUs as their fiefdom. The IRCTC saga has at least shown that DIPAM, under this government, is not asleep at the wheel and can act swiftly to reverse market-alienating decisions of babudom.

All this apart, the IRCTC roller-coaster also underlines the importance of investors in good companies, not giving in to hair-trigger reactions, when responding to market events. Investors who sold their IRCTC shares in panic at lows would be ruing their decision to jump off a still-racing train.

That the stock showed a build-up in buying volumes ahead of the official announcement to withdraw the sharing arrangement, also shows that the market (or insiders in it) often know far more about a company’s actions than you would imagine. If you find a stock behaving in a fashion that you think to be completely irrational after a news event, take time to digest it and gather all the information, without acting impulsively. Budget for the possibility that the market may be right and you may be wrong.

The IRCTC saga also demonstrates the brutality and quickness with which the market can punish a highly fancied (and expensively priced) ‘quality’ stock, when there’s an alteration to the bull case it has imagined. Taking the right decisions (to hold, sell or buy) through such periods of pain is an essential part of a multi-bagger journey, which is why equity returns are never easily made.

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D-Street to raise record Rs 31,000 crore from deluge of IPOs in 2 weeks, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The Indian capital market is set to witness one of the busiest fortnights in its history as six companies have lined up to together raise about Rs 31,400 crore by November 10.

The six issues include the one from tech-enabled payments major One 97 Communications, operating under the Paytm brand, which aims to raise Rs 18,300 crore.

Paytm has priced its IPO shares in the Rs 2,080-2,150 band per share, indicating the company seeks a valuation of about $20 billion. This will make the Paytm IPO the largest ever in the country’s history.

Till date the biggest IPO in India was the Rs 15,500-crore offer by Coal India in October-November 2010.

According to market sources, this could have two major implications for Dalal Street and the economy. First, there are fears among traders that the deluge of IPOs could force several investors to offload part of their portfolio and divert that money to invest in these offers, especially for listing gains. Second, the inflows from foreign funds, estimated to be about 40-50% of the total offer, could mean Rs 12,000-15,000 crore of forex inflows. This, in turn, could help appreciate the rupee.

On Thursday, despite a sharp sell-off in the stock market, the domestic currency closed 11 paise stronger at Rs 74.92 to a dollar. Usually, the day the stock market slides sharply, the rupee also weakens against major currencies like the US dollar, euro, pound sterling and the Japanese yen. Thursday’s strength in the domestic currency came despite a Rs 3,819-crore net selling by foreign funds, BSE data showed. According to a note by the forex advisory firm IFA Global, the strength of the rupee was “because foreign banks sold US dollars for overseas investments into Indian companies raising funds through initial public offerings”.

According to data collated from Sebi, merchant bankers and various brokerages, FSN E-Commerce Ventures, the company that operates under the Nykaa brand name, is raising Rs 5,350 crore while PB Fintech (under Policybazaar brand name) is raising Rs 5,200 crore, Fino Payments Bank Rs 1,200 crore, SJS Enterprises Rs 800 crore and Sigachi Industries Rs 125 crore.

In addition to the big ticket listings, three more high profile IPOs are also lined up after these got the Sebi green signal in the last few weeks. Adani Wilmar is eyeing Rs 4,500 crore, One MobiKwik is expected to raise Rs 1,900 crore and the offer size for Star Health is expected to be in excess of Rs 3,000 crore, market sources said. These offers could open anytime now, merchant bankers said.

The government is also planning to list life insurance behemoth LIC before the end of the fiscal year through its IPO. This offer is expected to garner anything between Rs 70,000 crore and Rs 1 lakh crore, merchant bankers said.



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IPO financing costs double as 5 IPOs set to hit market, raise Rs 31,000 crore, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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After the Reserve Bank of India capped the borrowing from NBFCs for IPO subscription to Rs 1 crore per borrower, investors have been hit by doubling interest rates in the last two months.

Funding rates have shot up as many large-sized IPOs are scheduled within a short span of time. Interest rates have risen to 12-13 per cent in the last two months as liquidity has tightened in the system. Liquidity is further seen going down in the next couple of weeks and funding rates may rise further. With five IPOs scheduled to hit the market by November 3 and aiming to raise Rs 31,000 crore, the demand for funds is bound to go up amid a liquidity crunch.

Five IPOs

Five companies are looking to mop up over Rs 31,000 crore cumulatively between October 28 and November 10. Industry players expect Nykaa to be the biggest draw. Its IPO is expected to generate bids between Rs 80,000 crore and Rs 90,000 crore in the HNI category.

NBFCs issue seven-day commercial papers (CPs) to meet this funding requirement. The CPs are issued at 5.5 to 6.5 per cent. Industry players said the huge borrowing requirement had also led to a 100-200 basis points increase in CP rates.

Bajaj Finance, Kotak Securities, IIFL, JM Financial, and Motilal Oswal are among NBFCs that are looking to borrow or have borrowed from the CP market to lend to HNIs to apply for IPOs of Nykaa and others.

Rising costs

With the increase in funding rates, the cost per share has gone up drastically for wealthy investors.

For instance, at 7% for seven days, the cost for one share of Nykaa comes at around Rs 151 for 100 times HNI portion subscription. At 11%, the cost will go up

to Rs 237 per share, and at 13%, it will be Rs 280 per share. This means investors will make money only if the Nykaa lists with a premium of more than Rs 280 per share if one borrows at 13%.

The IPOs of Nykaa and PB Fintech are currently traded at a grey market premium of Rs 670 and Rs 220 apiece, respectively.

Raising funds

While the Nykaa IPO will hit the market on Thursday to raise Rs 5,352 crore, the PB Fintech IPO will open for subscription on Monday, November 1, to raise

Rs 5,710 crore. There is demand for nearly Rs 1 lakh crore from high-net worth investors for these two IPOs against the availability of Rs 50,000-60,000 crore at one time

NBFCs are readying a war chest of close to Rs 2 lakh crore to lend to high net worth individuals (HNIs) for their IPO bets.



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Fino Payments Bank IPO to open on October 29

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The ₹1,200 crore initial public offer of Fino Payments Bank will open on October 29 and close on November 2. “The price band for the offer has been determined at ₹560 to ₹577 per equity share,” it said on Tuesday.

The IPO size at the upper band is about ₹1,200 crore, comprising ₹900 crore through the offer for sale of 1.56 crore shares and ₹300 crore from fresh issuance of equity shares.

“The company intends to utilise the net proceeds from the fresh issue towards augmenting the bank’s tier-1 capital base to meet its future capital requirements,” it further said.

Also read: Fino Payments Bank gets SEBI nod to float IPO

The company and the selling shareholder have, in consultation with the book running lead manager to the offer, considered participation by Anchor Investors who participation will be on October 28. Axis Capital, CLSA India, ICICI Securities, and Nomura Financial Advisory and Securities (India) are the book running lead manager to the offer.

Fino Payments Bank is a wholly owned subsidiary of Fino Paytech Limited, which is backed by marquee investors like Blackstone, ICICI Group, Intel Capital Corporation, Bharat Petroleum, HAV3 Holdings (Mauritius) and World Bank Arm International Finance Corporation (IFC), among others.

The bank had received market regulator Sebi’s go-ahead for an initial public offering earlier this month. The fintech bank turned profitable in the fourth quarter of 2019-20 and has consistently made profits for seven consecutive quarters.

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ESAF Small Finance Bank, Anand Rathi Wealth among 7 cos to get Sebi’s nod for IPO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, As many as seven companies, including ESAF Small Finance Bank, Sapphire Foods India and Anand Rathi Wealth, have received capital markets regulator Sebi‘s nod to raise funds through initial public offerings (IPOs). In addition, PB Fintech, which operates an online insurance platform Policybazaar and credit comparison portal Paisabazaar, Paytm‘s parent firm One97 Communications, life sciences company Tarsons Products and HP Adhesives too received Sebi’s clearance to float their IPOs.

These companies, which filed their draft papers with Sebi between July and August, obtained the regulator’s observations during October 18-22, an update with Sebi showed on Monday.

In Sebi’s parlance, the issuance of observation is equivalent to the regulator’s approval.

ESAF Small Finance Bank’s Rs 997.78-crore public issue comprises a fresh issue of equity shares worth Rs 800 crore and an offer for sale of Rs 197.78 crore by existing shareholders, according to draft red herring prospectus (DRHP).

Under the offer for sale, the promoter will be selling shares worth Rs 150 crore, PNB MetLife would offload shares to the tune of Rs 21.33 crore, Bajaj Allianz Life will offer shares of Rs 17.46 crore, PI Ventures will sell Rs 8.73 crore worth shares and John Chakola will offer shares worth Rs 26 lakh.

The IPO of Sapphire Foods India Ltd, which operates KFC and Pizza Hut outlets, will be entirely an offer of sale (OFS) of 17,569,941 equity shares by promoters and existing shareholders.

As a part of the OFS, QSR Management Trust will sell 8.50 lakh shares, Sapphire Foods Mauritius Ltd will offload 55.69 lakh shares, WWD Ruby Ltd will divest 48.46 lakh shares and Amethyst will offer 39.62 lakh shares.

In addition, AAJV Investment Trust will sell 80,169 shares, Edelweiss Crossover Opportunities Fund will offload 16.15 lakh shares and Edelweiss Crossover Opportunities Fund-Series II will divest 6.46 lakh shares.

The initial share-sale of Anand Rathi Wealth Ltd, part of Mumbai-based financial services group Anand Rathi, is completely an offer for sale of 1.2 crore equity shares by promoters and existing shareholders.

Those offering shares in the offer for sale are — Anand Rathi Financial Services Limited, Anand Rathi, Pradeep Gupta, Amit Rathi, Priti Gupta, Supriya Rathi, Rawal Family Trust, Jugal Mantri and Feroze Azee.

According to the draft papers, Paytm plans to raise Rs 8,300 crore through fresh issue of equity shares and another Rs 8,300 crore through the offer-for-sale route.

Paytm founder, managing director and chief executive Vijay Shekhar Sharma and Alibaba group firms will dilute some of their stake in the proposed offer-for-sale.

In addition, investors selling stake include Antfin (Netherlands) Holding BV, Alibaba.Com Singapore E-Commerce Private Ltd, Elevation Capital V FII Holdings Ltd, Elevation Capital V Ltd, SAIF III Mauritius Company Ltd, SAIF Partners India IV Ltd, SVF Panther (Cayman) Ltd and BH International Holdings.

The Rs 6,017.50 crore IPO of PB Fintech comprises a fresh issue of Rs 3,750 crore worth of equity shares and an offer for sale of Rs 2,267.50 crore by existing shareholders.

As part of the OFS, SVF Python II (Cayman) will sell shares worth Rs 1,875 crore, Yashish Dahiya will offer shares worth Rs 250 crore and some other selling shareholders will also divest shares.

Tarsons Products’ IPO comprises fresh issuance of equity shares worth Rs 150 crore and an offer for sale of 1.32 crore equity shares by promoters and an investor.

As a part of the OFS, promoters — Sanjive Sehgal will offload up to 3.9 lakh equity shares and Rohan Sehgal will sell up to 3.1 lakh equity shares — and investor Clear Vision Investment Holdings Pte Ltd will divest up to 1.25 crore equity shares.

HP Adhesives’ initial share-sale consists of fresh issuance of 41.40 lakh equity shares and an offer of sale of 4,57,200 equity shares by promoter Anjana Haresh Motwani.

The company manufactures a wide range of consumer adhesives and sealants products such as PVC, solvent cement, synthetic rubber adhesive, PVA adhesives, silicone sealant, acrylic sealant, gasket shellac, other sealants and PVC pipe lubricant.

The shares of these companies will be listed on the BSE and NSE. PTI SP BAL BAL



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ESAF SFB, Paytm, Sapphire Foods among 7 firms to get Sebi’s nod for IPO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi: As many as seven companies, including ESAF Small Finance Bank, Sapphire Foods India and Anand Rathi Wealth, have received capital markets regulator Sebi’s nod to raise funds through initial public offerings (IPOs). In addition, PB Fintech, which operates an online insurance platform Policybazaar and credit comparison portal Paisabazaar, Paytm’s parent firm One97 Communications, life sciences company Tarsons Products and HP Adhesives too received Sebi’s clearance to float their IPOs.

These companies, which filed their draft papers with Sebi between July and August, obtained the regulator’s observations during October 18-22, an update with Sebi showed on Monday.

In Sebi’s parlance, the issuance of observation is equivalent to the regulator’s approval.

ESAF Small Finance Bank’s Rs 997.78-crore public issue comprises a fresh issue of equity shares worth Rs 800 crore and an offer for sale of Rs 197.78 crore by existing shareholders, according to draft red herring prospectus (DRHP).

Under the offer for sale, the promoter will be selling shares worth Rs 150 crore, PNB MetLife would offload shares to the tune of Rs 21.33 crore, Bajaj Allianz Life will offer shares of Rs 17.46 crore, PI Ventures will sell Rs 8.73 crore worth shares and John Chakola will offer shares worth Rs 26 lakh.

The IPO of Sapphire Foods India Ltd, which operates KFC and Pizza Hut outlets, will be entirely an offer of sale (OFS) of 17,569,941 equity shares by promoters and existing shareholders.

As a part of the OFS, QSR Management Trust will sell 8.50 lakh shares, Sapphire Foods Mauritius Ltd will offload 55.69 lakh shares, WWD Ruby Ltd will divest 48.46 lakh shares and Amethyst will offer 39.62 lakh shares.

In addition, AAJV Investment Trust will sell 80,169 shares, Edelweiss Crossover Opportunities Fund will offload 16.15 lakh shares and Edelweiss Crossover Opportunities Fund-Series II will divest 6.46 lakh shares.

The initial share-sale of Anand Rathi Wealth Ltd, part of Mumbai-based financial services group Anand Rathi, is completely an offer for sale of 1.2 crore equity shares by promoters and existing shareholders.

Those offering shares in the offer for sale are — Anand Rathi Financial Services Limited, Anand Rathi, Pradeep Gupta, Amit Rathi, Priti Gupta, Supriya Rathi, Rawal Family Trust, Jugal Mantri and Feroze Azeez.

According to the draft papers, Paytm plans to raise Rs 8,300 crore through fresh issue of equity shares and another Rs 8,300 crore through the offer-for-sale route.

Paytm founder, managing director and chief executive Vijay Shekhar Sharma and Alibaba group firms will dilute some of their stake in the proposed offer-for-sale.

In addition, investors selling stake include Antfin (Netherlands) Holding BV, Alibaba.Com Singapore E-Commerce Private Ltd, Elevation Capital V FII Holdings Ltd, Elevation Capital V Ltd, SAIF III Mauritius Company Ltd, SAIF Partners India IV Ltd, SVF Panther (Cayman) Ltd and BH International Holdings.

The Rs 6,017.50 crore IPO of PB Fintech comprises a fresh issue of Rs 3,750 crore worth of equity shares and an offer for sale of Rs 2,267.50 crore by existing shareholders.

As part of the OFS, SVF Python II (Cayman) will sell shares worth Rs 1,875 crore, Yashish Dahiya will offer shares worth Rs 250 crore and some other selling shareholders will also divest shares.

Tarsons Products’ IPO comprises fresh issuance of equity shares worth Rs 150 crore and an offer for sale of 1.32 crore equity shares by promoters and an investor.

As a part of the OFS, promoters — Sanjive Sehgal will offload up to 3.9 lakh equity shares and Rohan Sehgal will sell up to 3.1 lakh equity shares — and investor Clear Vision Investment Holdings Pte Ltd will divest up to 1.25 crore equity shares.

HP Adhesives’ initial share-sale consists of fresh issuance of 41.40 lakh equity shares and an offer of sale of 4,57,200 equity shares by promoter Anjana Haresh Motwani.

The company manufactures a wide range of consumer adhesives and sealants products such as PVC, solvent cement, synthetic rubber adhesive, PVA adhesives, silicone sealant, acrylic sealant, gasket shellac, other sealants and PVC pipe lubricant.

The shares of these companies will be listed on the BSE and NSE.



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IPO-bound unicorn MobiKwik under RBI scanner for data breach

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The alleged data breach of 3.5 million users at IPO-bound fintech unicorn MobiKwik is under RBI’s scanner.

The company has submitted a forensic audit report detailing the data breach, the RBI said in response to a right to information (RTI) petition filed recently. The petitioner sought to know the status and understand the procedure of the investigation.

Srinivas Kodali, independent researcher and privacy rights activist who had filed the RTI, told BusinessLine, “The RBI doesn’t care about informing individual customers. If there is a fraud happening due to data breach, the RBI ensures that the banks and payment processors refund that money under a certain limit. They think they are not obligated to inform individuals whose data was affected due to these breaches. And since there are no strict laws, MobiKwik got away without informing customers. MobiKwik also didn’t submit their report to the RBI, until the regulator reached out to them. There has been no independent investigation so far due to lack of data protection laws.”

Digital forensic audit

While the company did not respond to queries from BusinessLine, MobiKwik’s draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) filed in July 2021 mentioned, “We engaged an independent digital forensic audit expert to conduct an audit relating to these allegations. The forensic audit expert subsequently reported that based on the analysis of logs/ data provided to them, there was no unauthorised access from outside of our Company’s infrastructure or internally to the database server wherein customer data is stored, during the review period. The report, however, states certain limitations to the processes undertaken.”

Search engine created

The data leak was first reported by internet security researcher Rajshekhar Rajaharia in late February 2021, wherein 3.5 million individuals KYC documents were exposed through 37 million files. Apart from that, 100 million phone numbers, email ids, passwords, geodata, bank account details and credit card data were leaked.

“The hacker had, in fact, created a search engine using their data, which had 10 crore credit card and debit cards data. Just by entering the phone number, one could get access to the entire transaction history of the user. The leaked data even included details of some of the senior government officials and IPS officers. It was out in public. If it was all false, MobiKwik would have filed a defamation case against me,” Rajaharia told BusinessLine.

In an interview with BusinessLine earlier this month, Upasana Taku, co-founder, chairperson and COO, MobiKwik said, “ Our public statement is very much out there on our social media profiles where we have denied any breach in the system and we had even appointed a forensic auditor to check it and they too didn’t find any breach.”

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I-banks rake in decade-high $611mn on IPO, M&A wave, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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MUMBAI: The IPO frenzy and M&A wave are minting money for Deal Street.

Fees earned by big investment banks and boutique advisory firms in India rose to $611 million (over Rs 4,500 crore) in the first nine months of 2021, making it the highest in a decade. Equity issuances raked in $237 million (about Rs 1,770 crore) as IPO fund-raising activity spiked, followed by $196 million (Rs 1,465 crore) fetched by M&A and $177 million (over Rs 1,300 crore) by debt deals.

With two months left for the year to be completed, Ibanks anticipate record revenue on the back of bullish deal making momentum. In 2010, advisory fees were about $900 million and, in 2007, it had topped $1 billion. This calendar year till September 24, Bank of America earned the most ($55 million), vaulting three places from number four in 2020 to top the charts, according to data from Dealogic – a global tracker of investment banking business. Rival US banks JP Morgan and Citi retained their second and third positions, grossing $50 million and $35 million in revenues.

I-banks receive the bulk of the advisory fees on completion of an M&A or IPO transaction. Significantly, their earning charts are closely tracked as they determine bonus payouts for dealmakers. Switzerland’s Credit Suisse with $33 million revenue climbed one spot to number four in the latest rankings, while local bank Axis rocketed to the fifth position from 13th last year with $32 million. “2021 has been the busiest year for us in the last several years,” said Bank of America MD (investment banking) Asit Bhatia. “The IPO pipeline is the strongest it has ever been. 2021 will end as a record year in terms of equity capital market (ECM) fund-raise,” he said.

India Inc raised over $9.5 billion in the first nine months of this year through 72 IPOs. And with more companies intending to list on the stock exchanges in the coming months, 2021 will create anew record for IPO fundraise. Fees from ECM – which include IPOs, follow-on offerings and block deals – surpassed that of M&A for the first time in four years for Ibanks, according to Dealogic.

Kotak Mahindra Bank and Avendus, in which private equity fund KKR owns a majority stake, broke into the top 10 list of dealmakers by fees earned in 2021 till September 24. Kotak Mahindra netted $31 million in revenue, while Avendus, riding on transactions like Prosus buying BillDesk for $4.7 billion in what was the largest M&A in India’s fintech space, earned $28 million. Avendus, which is mainly into M&A advisory, is looking to get into capital market advisory to cash in on the IPO deal activity as several tech-enabled companies, including unicorns, make public-listing moves, said one of its top executives.

Firms are also looking to add freshers and seasoned investment bankers, said ICICI Securities head (investment banking and institutional equities) Ajay Saraf.



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Mobikwik sees ‘BNPL’ as its fastest growing business segment

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IPO-bound One Mobikwik Systems (Mobikwik) sees it’s ‘Buy Now Pay Later’ product — which enjoys higher margins — as a major growth driver and it’s fastest growing business segment in the days to come, said Co-founder Upasana Taku.

This digital financial services firm is also aiming to launch its ₹1,900 crore initial public offering (IPO) by this month end, Taku told BusinessLine in an interview.

Growing market

The ‘Buy Now Pay Later’ (BNPL) product allows consumers to pay later in instalments with no additional costs for their purchases.

Also see: Meet the 31 start-ups most likely to become unicorns soon

It is a growing market in India and, over the last eighteen months, has expanded from a level of a few million dollars annually to about $1.5–2 billion in total transaction value.

“We see BNPL as a major growth driver in the days to come. All metrics associated with BNPL are growing rapidly. In fact, in Q1 of this fiscal, the gross merchandise value (GMV) was much more than what we clocked as GMV for BNPL in all of last year. Whether it be number of transactions, average ticket size (grown to ₹ 3,200) or the number of repeat users — all of them are growing,” she added.

Under-served segment

Mobikwik is one of the leading players of BNPL with an approved user base of 23 million.

“Our near term aspiration is to first take the number of our active BNPL users to the same level as credit card in force of the largest credit card issuer in the country,” Taku added.

Increased smartphone penetration, cheapest data plans and a boom in online shopping has propelled the demand for pay later products in the country. Given the under-penetration of financial markets, digital financial service providers see ample scope for growth in the country.

Well-differentiated offerings

Meanwhile, Mobikwik is looking to tap the IPO market at a time when several other digital businesses, including its competitor Paytm, are looking to come out with their own public offerings this quarter (Oct–Dec 2021).

Asked if she felt this crowding of internet businesses at the IPO market could affect Mobikwik’s prospects, she replied in the negative.

Also see: Mobikwik gets SEBI’s nod to float IPO

“There are several digital and tech companies coming to market. It is a good thing for India for the scale of GDP that it has. So far, there have been only three to four tech IPOs. India is going to have a booming high-growth internet economy for the next decade. We at Mobikwik are well positioned to ride on trend. Our business model is well-differentiated when compared to others. Hopefully, investors will understand this,” Taku said.

“Two pillars of our growth are consumer payments and BNPL. This is a unique and differentiated value proposition that we are going out with,” she said.

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