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India’s rising valuations spur foreign firms to sell stakes

At least seven firms including US home appliance giant Whirlpool Corp. and Singapore Telecommunications Ltd., have reduced holdings in their local units since June, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

March 13, 2024 / 12:42 IST
India’s rising valuations spur foreign firms to sell stakes

Some foreign companies are paring stakes in their Indian businesses, taking advantage of the nation’s booming equity market to raise cash.

At least seven firms including US home appliance giant Whirlpool Corp. and Singapore Telecommunications Ltd., have reduced holdings in their local units since June, data compiled by Bloomberg show. British American Tobacco Plc. said Tuesday it plans to sell as much as $2.1 billion of shares in Indian partner ITC Ltd.

The companies are seeking to capitalize on India’s equity valuations which are among the most expensive in the world after eight years of annual gains. Analysts say these transactions contribute to increasing public shareholding, creating space for large investors to boost their holdings in the $4.5 trillion market.

“The easy monetization of stakes in Indian companies at current valuations show the market is becoming more mature amid rising support from domestic financial investors,” said Deven Choksey, managing director of DRChoksey FinServ Pvt.

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Whirlpool slashed its stake in the Indian unit from 75% to 51% last month and said it plans to use the proceeds of about $468 million to reduce debt. Singtel plans to use funds to invest in areas such as data centers, according to exchange filings.

British American Tobacco is offering 436.9 million shares at 384 rupees to 400.25 rupees each in a block trade, according to terms seen by Bloomberg. Shares of ITC Ltd. surged the most in nearly four years on Wednesday after 3.6% of the company’s equity traded in block deals.

The last major exit was in 2022 by cement maker Holcim AG when it sold its India business to Adani Group in a deal worth about $11 billion.

India’s main stock gauges have risen to new records, as continuous purchases by domestic investors helped offset net sales by foreigners.

Global funds have withdrawn a net $459 million from domestic shares since Jan. 1, while Asian peers such as South Korea and Taiwan have each received inflows of more than $8.4 billion.

A gush of cash into mutual funds has helped cushion the nation’s equities against the outflows. Equity assets with local money managers rose to a record $277 billion in February, with flows to recurring stock investment plans reaching a new monthly high of $2.4 billion.

The market’s resilience when some controlling shareholders are selling “is good news for funds, who are looking to raise and deploy more money in India,” said Sachin Mehta, a director of investment banking at Anand Rathi Advisors.

Bloomberg
first published: Mar 13, 2024 12:42 pm

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