Reliance’s $7 Billion Rights Rings in New Trading Venue in India

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FILE PHOTO: Labourers work behind an advertisement of Reliance Industries Limited at a construction site in Mumbai, India, March 2, 2016. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade/File Photo

By Administrator_India

Capital Sands

Reliance Industries Ltd., which popularized equities as an investment in the world’s second-most populous nation, is now the first to test a trading avenue in India with its record $7 billion rights issue.

Introduced in January, the trading platform allows shareholders to sell their rights entitlement to others interested in subscribing to the share sale. Reliance’s rights entitlement began trading on May 20 at 151.15 rupees — the difference between the closing price of 1,408.2 rupees on May 19 and the rights price of 1,257 rupees — and settled at 181.6 rupees Tuesday on the National Stock Exchange.

“This is the perfect start to the platform because you’re seeing the excitement on both the buying and the selling side,” said the source. “The progress of this platform will depend on more large-cap companies coming forward and using it.”

The rights issue of the firm controlled by Mukesh Ambani is attracting new investors after it raked in $10 billion of investments into digital services unit Jio by selling stakes to companies including Facebook Inc. Asia’s richest tycoon is steering the conglomerate into newer consumer businesses, and the fundraising gives investors a chance to bet on him pulling off the transformation.

French bank Societe Generale SA’s unit picked up 3.3 million of Reliance’s rights entitlements at 182 rupees on May 20, according to data from the NSE. As many as 29 million of the securities traded that day, surpassing the number of Reliance shares that changed hands, the data show. Volumes have since ebbed and totaled 15.12 million on Tuesday. The entitlements can be traded until May 29.

Reliance’s rights issue to its 2.3 million shareholders offers one share for every 15 held in the company at 1,257 rupees apiece. The stock fell 0.5% to close at 1,424 rupees on Tuesday.

“Now, there is more clarity for investors as Jio will be separate from retail and petro-chem businesses,” said Umesh Mehta, head of research at Samco Securities Ltd. in Mumbai. “The sum of the parts will be greater than the current holding company structure. This will be a good opportunity for investors from a five-year perspective.”

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