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India Extends IPO Approvals, Middle East Conflict Hurts Market Sentiment

MUMBAI, April 7 (Reuters) - India markets regulator on Tuesday granted a one-time extension for approved ‌public offers that are being deferred due to weak market sentiment as a result of the Middle East war, which has entered the sixth week.

The relief will ​apply for companies whose regulatory approval will lapse ​between April 1 and September 30, the Securities ⁠and Exchange Board of India said, extending it ​to until September 30.

India mandates that companies must go ​public within 12 to 18 months of regulatory approval.

The regulator said exchanges will not penalize companies that cannot meet the requirement of having a ​minimum of 25% shares with the public. This ​leeway will also be until September 30.

Similar extensions were given during ‌the ⁠COVID-19 pandemic.

The relaxations follow requests from market participants as the war and the resultant market volatility have led several firms to defer or withdraw share issuance plans.

Regulatory clearances ​of about 40 ​companies planning ⁠to mobilise capital to the tune of 435 billion rupees ($4.68 billion) would have lapsed ​by September 30, data from information provider ​Prime ⁠Database showed.

"The extension enables issuers to better assess market conditions and strategically time their IPO launches amid heightened volatility ⁠and ​subdued sentiment," Mahavir Lunavat, chairman of ​Association of Investment Bankers of India, said.

($1 = 92.9580 Indian rupees)

Reporting by ​Jayshree P Upadhyay; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala and Arun Koyyur

Source: Reuters


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