Indian Stock
Market - Promoter stake in listed firms at 16 year low....!
Promoter shareholdings in listed
companies has dropped to the lowest in almost 16 years. This is on the back of
the emergence of professionally-managed companies with typically no
identifiable promoters.
Also, the regulatory diktat on companies
to have a minimum 25% public float has contributed to the gradual decline in
promoter shareholdings.
Some of the recent reduction could
be due to some promoters diluting their stakes to cash on rising valuations,
said experts.
The average promoter shareholdings
in BSE 500 companies stood at 49.1% for the June 2017 quarter (Q1) the lowest
since December 2001.
Promoter Holdings- BSE 500
Promoter
Holdings- BSE 500
|
Number
of Companies
|
0.00%
|
14
|
Less
than 10%
|
4
|
Between
10%-25%
|
15
|
Between
25% to 50%
|
133
|
Between
50% to 75%
|
302
|
Between
75% to 90%
|
18
|
Between
90% to 100%
|
0
|
As on
August 2017
|
|
Promoter shareholding is down 10%
points from 59.1% in December 2007, peak of the previous bull run.
The declining promoter
shareholdings is a positive trend for Indian equities as global indices, such
as the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, take into account only the free-float
(non-promoter) holdings while computing the weight for a nation or an individual
company. Higher non-promoter holdings means higher index weight, as that much
more of shares are available for the public shareholders.
In recent years, a large portion of
foreign investor flows into India have been exchange-traded funds (ETFs) or
passive flows. The MSCI EM index, for instance, is tracked by an estimated $1.6
trillion of assets.
Globally, India has been a market
with one of the highest promoter shareholding. This has constrained the flows
into domestic markets. To illustrate, South Korea or Taiwan, much smaller
markets compared to India, have higher weight on the MSCI EM index, thereby
cornering a greater share of ETF flows.
Sector players say promoter
holdings in India could come down further, as the government is expected to
reduce its holdings in state-owned companies to at least 75%.
Also, with the listing of more
companies, particularly in the financial services and start-up space, the
free-float will increase, as most of these companies have little or no promoter
holding.
A lot of new entrants to the stock
market, such as microfinance firms Equitas Holdings and Ujjivan Financial
Services, have no identifiable promoters and, hence, their entire shareholdings
in free float. On the BSE 500 index, there are a dozen other companies with zero
promoter holding.
Among the companies with high
promoter holding are multinationals such as GSK Pharma, ABB, Gillette India and
Siemens.
Almost 75% shareholding in these
companies is held by their foreign promoters.
Also, state-owned entities such as Hindustan
Copper, SJVN and NBCC have government holding of 90%. The Centre was to reduce
the holding to 75% by August, but the deadline has been extended by a year.
Src: Samie Modak, BS
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