Subscriptions for the initial public offering (IPO) of state-run defence equipment maker Bharat Dynamics Ltd neared the halfway mark on the second day of bidding on Wednesday, as more retail investors joined institutions with their share applications.
The issue of 22.45 million shares received bids for nearly 10.24 million shares on the second day, stock-exchange data showed.
Institutional buyers bid for 5.52 million shares, or half the portion reserved for them. High net-worth individuals and corporate bodies bid for 7.5% of their quota, the data showed.
The portion set aside for retail investors, who cannot individually bid for shares exceeding Rs 2 lakh in value, was covered 57%.
Bharat Dynamicsâ IPO was subscribed roughly 33% on the first day on Tuesday.
The IPO, which does not have anchor investors, will close on Thursday.
The offering is entirely a share sale by the government, which will raise up to Rs 960.94 crore ($148 million) at the upper end of the Rs 413-428 price band. The Hyderabad-based company is not issuing any fresh shares.
Bharat Dynamics is seeking a valuation of Rs 7,844 crore ($1.2 billion) at the upper end of the price band.
The governmentâs stake will fall to 87.75% after the IPO from 100%. It will get three years from the date of listing to bring its stake down to 75% or below to meet regulatory norms on minimum public holding.
SBI Capital Markets, IDBI Capital Markets & Securities and Yes Securities are the merchant bankers managing the IPO.
Bharat Dynamics had filed for the IPO on 22 January. It received regulatory clearance on 15 February.
The stake sale in Bharat Dynamics is part of the governmentâs Rs 72,500 crore disinvestment target set for the current financial year. The government has already exceeded the target, having raised Rs 92,476 crore. More than a third of that amount, Rs 36,9015 crore, came from a sale of stake in state-run refiner Hindustan Petroleum Corp Ltd to state-run explorer Oil and Natural Gas Corp.
Apart from Bharat Dynamics, the government is looking to list state-run defence firms Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd and Mishra Dhatu Nigam Ltd.
The government has set a divestment target of Rs 80,000 crore for 2018-19, as it looks to boost rural and infrastructure spending as well as contain the fiscal deficit ahead of general elections by next year.
Bharat Dynamics was incorporated in 1970. The company is the sole supplier of surface-to-air missiles and anti-tank guided missiles to the Indian armed forces. It also makes underwater weapons, launchers, torpedoes and other equipment. It had an order book of Rs 11,164 crore as on 31 October 2017.
The company runs three factories in Hyderabad, Bhanur (both in Telangana) and Visakhapatnam (Andhra Pradesh). It is setting up two more factories at Ibrahimpatnam (near Hyderabad) and Amravati in Maharashtra to make missiles.