Fincare Small Finance Bank files Rs 1,330-cr IPO papers with Sebi, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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New Delhi, May 9 () Digital lender Fincare Small Finance Bank has filed preliminary papers with capital market regulator Sebi to raise Rs 1,330 crore through an initial share-sale. The initial public offer (IPO) comprises fresh issue of equity share of the bank worth Rs 330 crore and an offer for sale aggregating up to Rs 1,000 crore by promoter Fincare Business Services Limited, according to the Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP).

This offer includes a reservation for subscription by employees.

The bank would utilise net proceeds from the fresh issue towards augmenting its Tier-1 capital base to meet future capital requirements. Further, a small portion of the proceeds will be used towards meeting the expenses in relation to the offer.

Under the terms of the RBI final approval and the small finance bank (SFB) licensing guidelines, the lender is required to list its equity shares on the stock exchanges within a period of three years from reaching a net worth of Rs 500 crore.

The Bengaluru-based MFI-turned small finance bank started operations in July 2017. Before converting into a small finance bank, Fincare Small Finance Bank largely conducted business from two entities – Disha Microfin focused on the western region and the south-focused Future Financial Services.

On May 3, Motilal Oswal Private Equity (PE) announced that it has picked up a minority stake in Fincare Small Finance Bank through a secondary acquisition worth around Rs 185 crore (USD 25 million).

The investment was through India Business Excellence Fund-III, a fund managed and advised by Motilal PE.

ICICI Securities, Axis Capital, IIFL Securities, SBI Capital Markets and Ambit Private Limited have been appointed as merchant bankers to advise the SFB on the IPO.

The equity shares of the lender will be listed on BSE and NSE.



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Fincare SFB to file IPO papers this week, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Mumbai: Bengaluru-based Fincare Small Finance Bank will file its draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) with the market regulator Sebi for an initial public offer (IPO) this week.

The issue size is said to be in the range of Rs 1,200-Rs 1,400 crore and would comprise of a fresh issue and offer for sale by the existing shareholders, according to market sources. Fincare SFB backed by investors such as True North, TA Associates, Tata Opportunities Fund and SIDBI, is the latest small finance bank (SFB) to announce plans to go for initial public offering.

ICICI Securities, Axis Capital, and Ambit Capital are the book running lead managers for the issue.

TPG-backed Jana Small Finance Bank, ESAF Small Finance Bank and Utkarsh Small Finance Bank have already filed DRHP with the regulator for IPOs and are expected to hit the market over the next couple of months.

Fincare SFB was one of the 10 micro finance institutions that received RBI permission to convert into a small finance bank. Under RBI norms, SFBs are required to list within three years of reaching a net worth of Rs 500 crore and Fincare SFB has to list before September 2021 as per RBI rules for small finance banks.

SFBs were in the limelight recently as RBI has decided to allow the classification of priority sector lending for loans given by small finance banks to micro-finance institutions (MFI) for on-lending to individuals. The decision has been taken to address the liquidity issues amid the severe Covid crisis. SFB stocks like Ujjivan Small Finance Bank and Equitas Small Finance Bank have been performing well on the bourses on the back of strong investor interest in the sector.



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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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Paytm launches ‘Wealth Community’ for young investors

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Home-grown digital financial services platform Paytm has launched a new video-based wealth community called the Paytm Wealth Community.

Paytm Wealth Community is an investing community based on video, and “will enable users to attend live sessions conducted by subject matter experts across an array of wealth topics like Stocks, F&O, IPO, ETFs, Mutual Funds, Gold, Fixed Income, and Personal Finance,” the company said in an official release.

“Users will be able to learn from experts, interact with them to clarify doubts, and also chat with other users on the platform to discuss various wealth-related topics,” it said.

The community is meant to tap young users and has been designed for the needs of the “new Indian investor.”

Artificial Intelligence: Financial services industry behind the curve in meeting customer expectations

In beta mode first

“The next 100mn capital market investors in India are expected to originate from social groups and investment communities. Paytm Wealth Community intends to be the leader in helping users save, invest & trade better,” the company said.

The “intuitive” platform will offer live video content on an interactive chat platform. Creators can conduct 30 to 60-minute sessions in multiple languages like Hindi, English, Gujarati and others.

The Paytm Wealth community is owned and operated by OCL Ltd (Paytm) and is initially being offered in beta mode on the Paytm Money platform. It will be offered in beta for select users for the next two months, followed by open access for all.

A limited set of creators have been onboarded by Paytm in beta. In a bid to ensure the safety of retail investors, all creators go through a comprehensive KYC onboarding and all content is recorded/checked, the company said. Over time, users will be able to create custom discussion rooms, set up their creator accounts and chat.

Paytm Money opens new Technology Development Centre in Pune

Community calendar

Varun Sridhar, CEO of Paytm Money, said, “Paytm Money was a natural choice for the Beta launch of Paytm Wealth Community, given our direct access to the broad investment community and reach across India. The Paytm team has implemented cutting edge video & community technology ensuring the platform is seamless, and the user communication is safe and secure. We are very excited by the potential positive impact it will have on how users engage, learn and invest.”

Users who have received access to the Paytm Wealth Community can explore the community calendar, which lists out all upcoming sessions and their details on the Paytm Money app. They can also share sessions on various social media platforms. Other interested users can download or update their Paytm Money app to the latest version and follow Paytm Money on social media platforms to get access to the live session links.

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After best-ever start to a year, $49 billion Asia IPO boom likely to taper off, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Julia Fioretti

As in the U.S., initial public offering activity out of Asia has had its strongest-ever start to a year. That frenzy for new shares is likely to taper off as demand falls back to earth in the next few months.

Asian companies, like their global peers, notched their best first quarter for listings ever, thanks to a flood of liquidity during the pandemic, super-low interest rates, and rallying stock markets. The firms raised $49.3 billion through first-time share sales at home and abroad — a 154% jump over the same period in 2020, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

IPOs globally raised an unprecedented $215 billion, with almost half of that haul coming from the record wave of issuance by special-purpose acquisition companies in the U.S.

Now, a global rotation out of highly-valued tech and health-care stocks that have dominated market activity, as well as fading excitement around SPACs in the U.S., is clouding the outlook for new deals.

“Inevitably, there is a mark to market of comparable valuations,” said William Smiley, co-head of equity capital markets at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in Asia ex-Japan. “In terms of our pipeline, there hasn’t been any significant impact from the recent rotation, but opportunistic issuance may have decelerated.”

Asia’s IPO space faces an added challenge: the travails of Chinese tech firms, which dominate fundraising in the region. These companies are facing a crackdown against monopolistic practices at home and are also in focus as U.S.-China tensions keep rising. Last month, for instance, the U.S. moved forward with a law that could result in Chinese firms that don’t comply with U.S. auditing standards being kicked off American exchanges.

The red flags are already there, with the investor mania seen earlier this year for deals like the one by Chinese TikTok rival Kuaishou Technology starting to die down.

Chinese fintech company Bairong Inc., which raised $507 million, delivered the worst debut in three years among $500-million-plus Hong Kong IPOs when it fell 16% on Wednesday. U.S.-listed Chinese search giant Baidu Inc. and video-streaming service Bilibili Inc. raised a combined $5.7 billion through secondary listings in Hong Kong in March but had lackluster debuts.

In contrast, investors were seen scrambling for a piece of Kuaishou’s $6.2 billion Hong Kong IPO, the biggest listing globally so far this year, and Korean e-commerce giant Coupang Inc.’s $4.6 billion float.

Healthy Shakeout
That said, muted investor appetite for listings isn’t affecting the queue of hopefuls.

Online music company Tencent Music Entertainment Group, micro-blogging service Weibo Corp. and online travel service Trip.com Group Ltd. are among U.S.-traded Chinese companies seeking so-called “homecoming” listings in Hong Kong. These secondary listings, seen as a hedge against Sino-American tensions, raised $17 billion in Hong Kong last year and have amassed $6.4 billion so far in 2021.

“The secondary listing trend will continue but what should be interesting to see is whether new issuers who ultimately want to get to a dual listing, perhaps consider seeking a dual primary listing in Hong Kong and the U.S. from the start rather than doing a primary U.S. listing, waiting two years and then coming to Hong Kong for the secondary listing” said Francesco Lavatelli, head of equity capital markets for Asia Pacific at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Tech and health-care firms make up the bulk of the listing pipeline in Asia, say bankers, even without the “homecoming” cohort, many of whom opted for U.S. listings because of the American investor base’s greater familiarity with new economy stocks. Among them: health-care startup WeDoctor, which is planning a multi-billion dollar Hong Kong IPO and China’s Uber-like startup Full Truck Alliance, which is looking into a $1 billion U.S. listing.

“The pipeline remains quite robust but is centered around tech and growth stocks, which are obviously seeing a little bit of a re-rating,” said Tucker Highfield, co-head of equity capital markets for Asia Pacific at Bank of America Corp. “The thesis of good companies being able to buck the trend of volatility will continue and there’s capital available.”

Ultimately, less frothy markets and a cooling of the IPO investor mania may actually be welcome.

“Entering a more balanced market environment isn’t a bad thing. It can extend the issuance cycle and work to keep excesses in check,” Smiley said. “If there is going to be correction, you want it to be fast – a prolonged downturn kills issuance.”



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Should you go for pre-IPO investing?

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With IPO subscriptions going through the roof and the pricing in IPOs expensive in many cases, investors have an option to participate early by investing in companies through the pre-IPO market or the unlisted market. This market, in which HNIs and even retail investors have started investing, helps invest in companies that are unlisted and are expected to go for an IPO in the mid to long term.

According to Unlisted Zone (amongst top 10 unlisted share brokers), their gross transaction value in the unlisted market has gone up from ₹2.1 crore in 2018-19 to ₹19.1 crore in 2019-20. In FY21 (so far), it has been more than ₹40 crore. Also, the number of transactions earlier were 5-10 per day compared to 20 per day now.

How it works

A typical deal in the unlisted market starts with a buyer (with a demat account) getting connected to an unlisted shares dealer. The price and brokerage is agreed upon. The buyer sends money to the seller after which the share transfer is done along with a transaction proof exchange. By T+0 evening or T+1 morning, the transaction is completed with unlisted shares reflecting as ISIN numbers in the demat account of the buyer.

There are no set rules on what is the minimum and maximum investment limit under the pre-IPO investing. It usually depends on the broker you are interacting with. Earlier, the minimum size for pre-IPO deals used to be a few lakh of rupees. But with the ecosystem gaining more depth, i.e., more brokers, more buyers, more ESOP sellers, more research and start-up investing gaining traction, one can start transacting with as little as ₹25,000.

The benefit of a pre-IPO deal is that you buy the companies at an earlier stage and at a cheaper valuation, if available, compared to buying as a normal investor at the IPO. If you can identify opportunities before the market at large does, it can translate to much greater gain when the company goes for an IPO and lists its shares.

Beware the risks

Pre-IPO investing certainly does look interesting but before pushing the pedal on this instrument, understand that it involves high risk.

First, the pre-IPO market is illiquid. You may not be able to sell your shares when you want as there may not be any buyer in the market. The liquidity is low because it is a niche segment that trades over the counter and not through an exchange.

Second, the risk of IPO timeline. The IPO of the unlisted company you invested in can get delayed due to market conditions. Also, it is better to check if the management has provided any guidance on their IPO plans.

Next is the valuation at which the unlisted shares are being bought. Unless, a comprehensive valuation check with listed peers is done, you may end up buying at high valuations.

Further, there is the risk of being charged higher transaction costs by the broker you are dealing with. Investors should note that they can pay maximum 1-2 per cent premium on the cost price as brokerage. So, check prices with a few other dealers and compare before you enter a transaction.

Note that pre-IPO investing comes with a one year lock-in once the company’s shares get listed. So, one may miss the listing gains if the company makes a successful debut on the markets.

Also, if the fundamentals of the company changes and that warrants selling the stock, you may not be able to do so until one year.

Finally, one has to be cautious of frauds. Last year, a Bangalore-based prominent wealth management firm’s founder was arrested for a pre-IPO investing fraud. They took the money for the shares but never delivered the shares. Always deal with a trusted broker with a good track record.

Note that since there is no ombudsman or appointed entity for redressal, the only legal option left is to file a police complaint against the individual or directors of the company.

Taking into consideration all of the above, it becomes apparent that only investors with mid to high risk appetite should take a look at this instrument.

The writer is COO at JST Investments

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Suryoday Small Finance Bank wants to raise Rs. 582 via IPO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Reserve Bank of India had made it mandatory for the Small Finance Banks to hit the capital market within three years of operations. Pandemic slowdown the process for many of the SFBs, Just after Utkarsh Small Finance Bank filed for an IPO, Suryodaya too disclosed its plans.

Suryoday has decided to launch their initial public offer of equity shares of face value of ₹10 each on 17th March 2021. The Issue will close on 19th March 2021. The price band of the Offer has been fixed at ₹303 to ₹305 per Equity Share.

The Issue comprises of a fresh issue of up to 8,150,000 Equity Shares and an offer for sale of up to 10,943,070 Equity Shares. The Issue includes a reservation of up to 500,000 Equity Shares for subscription by eligible employees under the “Employee Reservation Portion” which is hereinafter referred to as “Net Issue”.

The Bank and the Selling Shareholders in consultation with the Book Running Lead Managers, may offer a discount of up to 10% (equivalent of ₹ 30 per equity share) of the issue price to eligible employees bidding in the Employee Reservation Portion (“Employee Discount”).

Suryoday Small Finance Bank said in a statement, “The bank has undertaken a Pre-IPO placement of 5,208,226 Equity Shares comprising (i) a private placement of 3,084,833 Equity Shares to SBI Life Insurance Company Ltd, 1,713,795 Equity Shares to Axis Flexi Cap Fund, 342,760 Equity Shares to Axis Equity Hybrid Fund, 66,838 Equity Shares to Kiran Vyapar Ltd.”

The Issue is being made through the Book Building Process, wherein not more than 50% of the Net Issue shall be allocated on a proportionate basis to Qualified Institutional Buyers, provided that the Bank and the Selling Shareholders may, in consultation with the Book Running Lead Managers, allocate up to 60% of the QIB Portion to Anchor Investors on a discretionary basis in accordance with the SEBI ICDR Regulations.

In the event of under-subscription, or non-allocation in the Anchor Investor Portion, the balance Equity Shares shall be added to the Net QIB Portion. Further, 5% of the Net QIB Portion shall be available for allocation on a proportionate basis only to Mutual Funds, and the remainder of the Net QIB Portion shall be available for allocation on a proportionate basis to all QIBs.

Further, not less than 15% of the Net Issue shall be available for allocation on a proportionate basis to Non-Institutional Bidders and not less than 35% of the Net Issue shall be available for allocation to Retail Individual Bidders in accordance with the SEBI ICDR Regulations, subject to valid Bids being received at or above the Issue Price.

All potential Bidders (except Anchor Investors) are required to mandatorily utilise the Application Supported by Blocked Amount (“ASBA”) process providing details of their respective ASBA accounts, and UPI ID in case of RIBs using the UPI Mechanism, if applicable, in which the corresponding Bid Amounts will be blocked by the SCSBs or under the UPI Mechanism.

Axis Capital Limited, ICICI Securities Limited, IIFL Securities Limited and SBI Capital Markets Limited are the Book Running Lead Managers to the Issue



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Suryoday SFB IPO to open on March 17

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Suryoday Small Finance Bank is set to launch its initial public offering on March 17 and looks to raise about Rs 580 crore. The issue will close on March 19.

“The IPO will help the bank comply with the regulatory guidelines of the Reserve Bank of India for the listing of small finance banks within three years of their net worth reaching ₹500 crore, and also help raise enough primary capital to further enhance our capital base,” said R Baskar Babu, Managing Director and CEO, Suryoday SFB on Friday.

“The price band of the offer has been fixed at ₹303 to ₹305 per equity share,” the bank said in a statement, adding that it proposes to use the net proceeds from the fresh issue towards augmenting Tier – 1 capital base to meet its future capital requirements.

The issue comprises a fresh issue of up to 81.5 lakh equity shares and an offer for sale of up to 1.09 crore equity shares.

The bank has undertaken a pre-IPO placement of 52.08 lakh equity shares.

The offer for sale includes up to 43.87 lakh shares by International Finance Corporation, up to 20.21 lakh shares by Gaja Capital Fund II, up to 18.89 lakh shares by DWM (International) Mauritius, up to 7.5 lakh shares by HDFC Holdings, up to 15 lakh shares by IDFC First Bank, up to 1 lakh shares by Americorp Ventures, up to 1.86 lakh shares by Kotak Mahindra Life Insurance and up to 1.06 lakh shares by Gaja Capital India AIF Trust (represented by its trustee, Gaja Trustee Company).

The issue includes a reservation of up to five lakh shares (constituting up to 0.47 per cent of the post-Issue paid-up equity share capital), for subscription by eligible employees, who may be given a discount of up to 10 per cent of the issue price.

“Bids can be made for a minimum of 49 equity shares and in multiples of 49 equity shares thereafter,” the statement said.

Axis Capital, ICICI Securities, IIFL Securities and SBI Capital Markets are the Book Running Lead Managers to the issue

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Suryoday SFB raises Rs 150 crore before IPO, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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KOLKATA: Suryoday Small Finance Bank has raised Rs 150 crore from SBI Life Insurance Company and Axis Asset Management Company in a pre-IPO placement, valuing the bank at Rs 2,700 crore.

The pre-IPO placement was made at Rs 291.75 a share ahead of its likely initial public share sale that seeks to garner Rs 550-600 crore. The public issue is likely later this month.

The bank may attract 5-10% premium over the pre IPO price, people involved in the process said. Pre-IPO purchases of shares cannot be offloaded for a year.

A pre-IPO placement is a sale of a large chunk of shares ahead of an IPO. Normally, the price of equity shares at the time of public offer comes at a premium over the pre-IPO price.

It is learnt that SBI Life has invested Rs 90 crore while Axis Asset Management Co has put in Rs 60 crore.

Suryoday declined to comment, while SBI Life and Axis AMC did not respond to mails.

Suryoday would be the fourth small finance bank to come out with IPO after AU Small Finance Bank, Equitas Small Finance Bank and Ujjivan Small Finance Bank. Unlike Equitas and Ujjivan, Suryoday has no holding company.

ESAF Small Finance Bank is also preparing for its public offer, which is likely to be in next fiscal, while Utkarsh Small Finance Bank has recently sought market regulator Securities & Exchange Board of India’s approval for public share sale. Reserve Bank of India has mandated small finance banks to get listed within three years of reaching a net worth of Rs 500 crore.

The non-operating holding companies of both Equitas and Ujjivan are also listed.

The market capitalization of Equitas Holdings is Rs 3,093 crore at the end of Tuesday’s trade, while that of Equitas Small Finance Bank is Rs 6,618 crore. Market cap of Ujjivan Financial Services is Rs 2,957 crore while that for the Ujjivan Small Finance Bank is Rs 5,919 crore.

Equitas Small Finance Bank had its loan portfolio at Rs 17,373 crore at the end of December 2020, while Ujjivan Small Finance Bank had it at Rs 13,638 crore.

Suryoday’s gross loan portfolio was Rs 3,711 crore at the end of March 2020 with 76% of it constituting microloans to women borrowers. The bank also has commercial vehicle loans, affordable housing loans and loans to small and medium enterprises in its bouquet of products. It’s net interest margin for FY20 was 11.92%. Suryoday’s loan portfolio grew to around Rs 3,900 crore at the end of December.

The bank’s average collection efficiency, a measure of future asset quality, was at 82% for the month of December while it was lower in three key states — Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Odisha. These three states together account for 77% of its lending businesses.

The bank’s IPO includes fresh issue of up to 11.59 million equity shares and an offer for sale of up to 8.4 million equity shares. Existing investors such as International Finance Corporation, Gaja Capital, DWM (International) Mauritius, IDFC First Bank, Kotak Mahindra Life Insurance and Polaris Banyan Holding will be paring their stakes through the offer for sale, according to the draft red herring prospectus.



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Low bad loans may help Utkarsh Small Fin Bank look good on IPO Charts, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Utkarsh Small Finance Bank which has filed preliminary papers with markets regulator Sebi to raise Rs 1,350 crore through an initial share sale, has the lowest bad loans ratio among peers.

The bank’s deposits and disbursements grew at a CAGR of 54.48 per cent and 33.66 per cent, respectively during FY18-20.

The lender’s gross loan portfolio has grown at 44% CAGR since its start in FY18.

Loan book has remained stagnant in the last six months till September due to the pandemic, in line with its peers such as AU Small Finance Bank Ltd and Equitas Small Finance Bank Ltd.

Its gross non-performing assets are down to 0.71% as of March 2020 from 1.85% two years before that, but up from 0.64% in September 2020. About Rs 26.9 crore loans were not labelled as bad due to the Covid moratorium.

Collection efficiency

Collection efficiency is down with the bank able to collect 79.28% of its dues as against 90-95% rate before the pandemic.

The bank has the lowest level of bad loans among peers and is better poised to show faster improvement once the pandemic ends.

Deposits

The bank’s deposits grew by 14% during April-September with the share of its low-cost CASA deposits going up to 14.46% as of September, which will help in margins.

While the portfolio is dominated by microfinance assets, growth in newer segments has risen and the bank’s main focus is to diversify the asset portfolio.

The issue

The Initial Public Offer (IPO) comprises a fresh issue of equity shares worth Rs 750 crore and an offer of sale to the tune of Rs 600 crore by promoter Utkarsh Coreinvest Ltd, according to the Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) filed with Sebi.

The Varanasi-headquartered lender said it may also consider raising Rs 250 crore through a pre-IPO placement which would be in consultation with the lead managers to the issue.

The utilisation

The Proceeds from the fresh issue would be utilised to augment the Tier 1 capital base to meet future capital requirements.

As on September 30, 2020, the small finance bank across 528 banking outlets served 2.74 million customers, majorly located in rural and semi-urban areas in Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Jharkhand that have a significant untapped market.



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