Bharti Infratel shares drop 13 percent in market debut
By Devidutta Tripathy and Denny Thomas
NEW DELHI/HONG KONG | Fri Dec 28,
2012 4:25pm IST
(Reuters) - Bharti
Infratel, backed by billionaire Sunil Mittal, dived 13 percent in its trading
debut after raising about $760 million in India's biggest IPO in two years,
weighed down by a cautious outlook for mobile tower operators.
The IPO, priced near the
lower end of an indicative range to ensure success, struggled to find interest
from retail investors and was supported mostly by overseas institutional
buyers, a key pillar in the Indian stock market. Bharti Infratel's poor
trading debut is unlikely to deter future offerings in India , bankers
said, with strong foreign fund bids expected to underpin the share
market. "It's early days and the stock should settle in the course of
the next day or two. If the foreign flows continue, the market will remain
buoyant which should translate into more deals," a person familiar with
the Bharti Infratel IPO said. "If not IPOs, there should be more follow-on
offerings."
Already, privately owned
Axis Bank Ltd(AXBK.NS)
has announced plans to raise fresh equity capital, and the source said a
possible listing of National Stock Exchange is among the other IPOs that
investors can expect. Bharti Infratel's listing follows a tepid first half
in IPO deals, and is the biggest after state-run Coal India 's $3.5
billion issue in 2010. The listing pushed India 's
IPO volume to $1.28 billion this year, shy of last year's $1.36 billion,
according to Thomson Reuters data. But that is still short of the record set in
2007 when Indian corporates raised $8.65 billion through IPOs. IPO volumes
are expected to improve further on rising foreign capital inflows. Several
high-profile deals including the potential IPO of Vodafone Group Plc's (VOD.L) India unit are
likely to hit as earlier as next year, bankers said.
Including follow-on share
offers, share sales volumes in India
jumped 70 percent from a year earlier to $14.8 billion, according to Thomson
Reuters data. The market will likely remain busy in 2013 with two large
share sales in state-run Oil India Ltd (OILI.NS)
and NTPC Ltd (NTPC.NS)
set to come in the next few weeks as part of the government's plan to raise
around $5.5 billion by exiting part of its stakes across a slew of
companies. "The quality of companies do matter a lot. Investors are
latching on to good quality names or where corporate governance and business
risks are far lower," said Dhananjay Sinha, the Mumbai-based co-head of
institutional research at Emkay Global Financial Services. Bharti Infratel, a unit
of top Indian mobile phone carrier Bharti Airtel Ltd (BRTI.NS)
and partly owned by KKR & Co Ltd (KKR.N),
closed at 191.65 rupees, having fallen as much as 14.3 percent during trade on
the National Stock Exchange. Bharti Infratel had
issued shares at 220 rupees to funds and wealthy investors, who received the
majority of the allocation. The company sold shares to retail investors at 210
rupees and to cornerstone investors at 230 rupees. The broader Nifty,
which has surged about 28 percent this year and is Asia 's
third best-performing market, ended 0.65 percent higher.
POOR SHOWING
Bharti Infratel's share
performance was poor compared with the surge in shares of Credit Analysis and
Research Ltd and PC Jeweller Ltd, both of which made their market debut this
week after raising around $100 million each. Weighing on the outlook for
mobile tower operators, an Indian court this year revoked permits of several
wireless carriers while demand growth for third and fourth-generation mobile
data services slowed.
"The business of
towers is under stress," said K.K. Mital, a portfolio manager at Globe
Capital in New Delhi .
"This is a business with a long gestation period and also not something
retail and HNIs (high net worth investors) easily understand."
Shares of GTL
Infrastructure Ltd (GTLI.NS),
the only other mobile tower operator listed in India , have slumped 90 percent in
the last two years, hit by debt repayment worries. Bharti Infratel priced
its IPO at lower valuations to overcome those concerns, and managed to attract
more than a dozen cornerstone investors including units of Morgan Stanley (MS.N) and
Citigroup Inc (C.N).
Bharti Infratel sold
about 146 million new shares, or more than three quarters of the shares on
offer, while four of its private equity investors, including Singapore state
investor Temasek Holdings and the private equity arm of Goldman Sachs Group Inc
(GS.N),
sold a total of 42 million shares as they cashed out of some of their early
investments.The selling price was at a steep discount to the $1 billion that
seven funds including Temasek and Goldman arm had paid in 2007 for a combined 9
percent stake in Bharti Infratel. KKR separately invested $250 million in 2008,
but its exact holding is not known.
Bharti Airtel, which
owned 86 percent of the tower operator before the IPO, did not sell any shares
in the process.Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Barclays Plc, Deutsche Bank AG,
HSBC Holdings Plc, JPMorgan Chase & Co, Standard Chartered Plc and UBS
AG were the foreign banks underwriting the IPO. Kotak Mahindra Bank and
Enam Securities were the domestic banks handling the share sale. Bharti
Infratel has about 34,000 towers and owns 42 percent of Indus Towers ,
the world's largest tower operator. Along with Indus ,
Bharti Infratel has a 38 percent share of the Indian telecommunications tower
market.
(Additional reporting by
Manoj Dharra; Editing by Rafael Nam and Ryan Woo)
http://in.reuters.com/article/2012/12/28/bharti-infratel-listing-idINDEE8BR02M20121228
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