Leading the pack
IIFL Securities won the lion’s share of India’s block business and showed its value in IPOs in 2023, highlighting its unrivalled ability to quickly place deals with a broad and strong investor base.
Unlike some large Indian investment banks which limit their block activity given the risky nature of overnight transactions, IIFL’s strong presence in the institutional broking business means it has plenty of clients who are looking to either buy or sell large blocks of shares.
This competitive advantage allows IIFL to place secondary shares with good quality investors, avoiding post-deal panic selling and earning the loyalty of marquee clients.
Since 2020, IIFL has been helping Baring Private Equity Asia to monetise its 70% stake in Indian IT services company Coforge. In 2023, it solely managed three blocks for BPEA in Coforge: a Rs24bn (US$288m) deal in February, an around Rs9bn disposal in May and a Rs77.4bn clean-up block in August which was also India’s largest block of the year.
BPEA also sold a Rs11.8bn block in CMS Info Systems through IIFL.
Another blue-chip client is private equity firm Blackstone, which has been regularly working with IIFL since the 2019 IPO of Embassy Office Parks REIT. In 2023, IIFL was one of the two banks that led Blackstone’s Rs70.7bn clean-up block in the REIT.
The unparalleled distribution power not only brings block business to IIFL, but also IPOs, for which India had a bumper year.
Blackstone made use of IIFL’s services for Nexus Select Trust’s Rs32bn IPO, one of the rare real estate investment trust floats in Asia amid rising interest rates.
IIFL, as one of five leads, also arranged the Rs43.2bn IPO of condom maker Mankind Pharma, the country’s largest last year. Although the deal was launched in May at a time when geopolitical and interest rate concerns were running high, IIFL managed to secure many top-tier anchor investors giving the listing a solid start. The shares gained 20% on their trading debut and reinvigorated the Indian IPO market.
A few of Mankind’s pre-IPO shareholders cut their stakes via an upsized Rs57.9bn block in December. This time, the shareholders only chose to work with IIFL and one other IPO bank.
IIFL also helped companies identify quick launch windows to sell primary capital through qualified institutional placements.
In March, when issuers and vendors were hesitant to tap the capital markets because of the volatile global stock markets, IIFL, as joint lead manager, raised Rs5bn for Data Patterns India from an upsized QIP.
IIFL also provided a novel solution to Cholamandalam Investment and Finance when the company wanted to raise funds while limiting immediate dilution. The bank, as joint bookrunner, tailor-made India’s first QIP of shares and compulsory convertible debentures totalling Rs40bn for the financial service provider.
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