Rediff.com« Back to articlePrint this article

NTPC blockbuster divestment gets Rs 11,500 cr

Last updated on: February 07, 2013 19:48 IST

The blockbuster NTPC stake sale on Thursday fetched government Rs 11,500 crore, the second PSU share sale in a week that was over-subscribed, helping to move closer to the Rs 30,000-crore disinvestment target.

The share sale of country's largest power producer NTPC was over-subscribed 1.7 times as an offer price lower than the scrip's trading rate on stock exchanges received tremendous interest from foreign investors.

Coming within a week of the share sale of Oil India, the NTPC issue also was also lapped up by foreign investors in a big way, making the government say there is still a huge demand for PSU shares in the market.

The total demand received for the offer was 132.84 crore shares, which is 1.7 times over the 78.32 crore shares or 9.5 per cent stake on the block.

The government had fixed the floor price or the minimum offer price at Rs 145 apiece. The indicative price, which is the weighted average price of all valid bids, came in at Rs 145.91 at the close of auction.

"The government is satisfied with the response to the NTPC offer. We expect more than Rs 11,500 crore from the issue," Disinvestment Secretary Ravi Mathur said.

The total proceeds realised from disinvestment would be over Rs 21,500 crore so far this fiscal with the success of NTPC issue, helping government inch towards the Rs 30,000 crore budgeted target.

Receipts from the stake sale would also help government restrict its fiscal deficit at 5.3 per cent of GDP in the ongoing fiscal.

"As far as FII participation is concerned there was good response. There is an appetite in market for PSU offerings in the market," Mathur said.

Shares of NTPC closed at Rs 148.15, down 2.72 per cent over its previous close on the BSE. During trade, NTPC scrip fell to a low of Rs 147.65, but still was higher than the floor price of Rs 145.

© Copyright 2024 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.