Investors left empty-handed in IndiGo block trade over rules

 

Bloomberg

Investors who attempted to participate in the 20.5 billion-rupee ($258 million) share sale in India’s largest airline IndiGo were left empty-handed due to a feature of the country’s trading rules that has long been a source of frustration for institutional fund managers.
None of the investors lined up by the banks working on billionaire Rakesh Gangwal’s sale of part of his family’s stake in
IndiGo got any shares in the block trade as a result of slippage, a phenomenon where orders aren’t filled due to the presence of bids with a higher competing price, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
While some degree of slippage is expected in the Indian market, a situation where none of the intended buyers in a trade gets any stock is extremely rare and likely to amplify irritation with the regulator’s rules that don’t allow block trades to be crossed directly on the exchange.
As is typically the case with privately-negotiated sales of large amounts of stock, the banks on the deal — Goldman Sachs Group Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Morgan Stanley in this case — lined up institutional buyers for the sale, which was priced at a 4.2% discount to the previous close. In most other markets, the shares could then change hands directly on the exchange.
But in India, if the trade is priced at a discount or premium of over 1% to the previous close, the orders have to go through the main market screen where they risk being edged out by orders from unrelated buyers. The vast majority of large share sales are priced at discounts wider than 1%, making them vulnerable to slippage.
Representatives for Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan declined to comment. Morgan Stanley, Gangwal and Securities & Exchange Board of India didn’t reply to requests seeking
comment.

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