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SJVN Ltd (Satluj Jal Vidyut Nigam Ltd) IPO Message Board (Page 3)

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891. UCA |   Link |  Bookmark | May 25, 2010 8:14:51 PM
SJVNL Public Issue

Recieved 1269 and 845 shares against 2 applications but still not recieved excess amount due for refund.
Application # 25483750 , # 25483751 What is to be done
890. IPOExpert |   Link |  Bookmark | May 24, 2010 10:58:15 AM
Forget about investing in standard chartered idr its fair price is not more than 90 rs. i think f1 will divert all its fund from indian market to their UK branch and give money to their international friends.

stock to loose 30% on opening

i was surprised to see sjvnl going below issue price because govt priced it fine and now they will have much difficulty in collecting money from ipo from retail participation from now onwards
889. T.C |   Link |  Bookmark | May 23, 2010 8:59:52 PM
Mr. Nayak i will not apply idr at rs.27, yah sjvnl and nhpc kay investors ko mubarak ho.
888. Nayak |   Link |  Bookmark | May 23, 2010 8:51:08 PM
Fair value of standard chartared idr is rs. 47 only, after listing it will trade 27 to 52.
887. Ballo |   Link |  Bookmark | May 23, 2010 6:40:17 PM
After ipo,fpo now idr ha ha ha .
886. Paal |   Link |  Bookmark | May 23, 2010 12:41:12 PM
Idr holders are not elagible for divedent ,bonus,and right therefore it will list upto 50% discount form current market rate,look prospectus.
885. vivek |   Link |  Bookmark | May 23, 2010 9:07:14 AM
. V. S. Santosh Kumar--business line

Conservative investors looking for defensive options can subscribe to the Indian Depository Receipt (IDR) offer of Standard Chartered (StanChart) PLC. The IDR is an opportunity for investors to invest in a globally diversified (both in terms of geography and segments) banking and financial services conglomerate at a reasonable price. Investors, however, need to bear in mind the higher capital gains and dividend tax incidence on returns from IDRs compared with domestic shares. Investors in the IDR would also lose out if the Rupee appreciates vis a vis the Pound.

StanChart's global access to low cost funds, the possibility of better growth driven by improving credit offtake as well as margins in the emerging markets and likely improvement in fee income as capital markets stabilise, argue for the investment.

Valuation

Each IDR represents one-tenth of Standard Chartered PLC's UK listed stock. The actual price at which the IDRs are offered for subscription by investors will be known only on Monday May 24th. The Friday closing price of Stanchart's shares at the London Stock Exchange offers a clue as to the likely level around which the eventual price would be determined. At Rs 103.6 (computed based on a 5 per cent discount on the current price of £16.1) ), the stock would discount the bank's calendar 2009 earnings by 13.4 times. The offer would be at a price-book value of 2.1 times, excluding goodwill. The pre-tax dividend yield would be 3.5 per cent.

This price would place the stock at a discount to most of the Indian private sector banks (1.8 to 4.4 times). While StanChart may not match the pace of Indian private sector banks on growth in its asset book, its large size, well-diversified presence across emerging markets, along with a clean balance sheet and strong risk management systems, make the stock a good investment.

The profit before tax (PBT) of StanChart for the year ended December 31, 2009 was Rs 24,044 crore .

Standard Chartered PLC intends to raise $500 million from this offer of IDRs. The primary objective appears to be an India listing as the offer will only add 1.18 per cent to the equity base and shore up the core capital ratio marginally from 8.92 per cent to 9.16 per cent. As of December 2009, the capital adequacy ratio of Standard Chartered PLC stood at a comfortable 16.5 per cent.

Business

Standard Chartered PLC is a holding company that offers a host of financial services through its subsidiaries in almost 70 countries with predominant presence in the high growth markets of Hong Kong, Korea, India, China, Africa and other Asian countries.

The company segments its business into Wholesale segment and Consumer segment.

The Wholesale segment comprises transaction banking , capital market services, corporate finance and principal finance mainly targeted to corporates. The bank's consumer banking encompasses credit cards, personal loans, wealth management, mortgages and auto loans.

StanChart has an international credit rating of A, as against BBB- sovereign credit rating for India, an indicator of the edge it enjoys over Indian banks in accessing global funds for its operations at a low cost. The bank's high low-cost deposit proportion of 53 per cent as of December 2009, also helps reduce the overall cost of funds.

Financials

StanChart's net profit attributable to shareholders grew by 14 per cent annually during 2006-09. The PBT during the same period grew at an annualised 17.4 per cent. During the period 2006-09, the profit contribution from under-banked and high-margin geographies such as India, Asian economies such as China and Indonesia and Africa rose at a much faster pace than that from the developed regions, thereby increasing the overall profitability. StanChart also made acquisitions such as Union Bank of Pakistan (in 2006), American Express Bank (2008) and Korea First Bank Hsinchu International Bank which strengthened its presence in the emerging markets. StanChart adopts advanced Basel II norms on par with global banks with respect to its operational structure, which lends higher transparency and increases its readiness to tackle risks.

India, despite being a smaller business in terms of lending, has been a significant profit contributor to StanChart owing to higher fee based income from the growing wholesale banking business. India contributed 20 per cent to PBT, though it only made up 6.5 per cent of the asset book in 2009.

Despite it being a troubled year, StanChart weathered 2009 reasonably well. While its total income grew by 9 per cent, the costs only grew at 4 per cent thereby improving the group operating profits. This helped cost-income ratio fall from 56 per cent in 2008 to 51 per cent in 2009. A huge jump in the provisioning for bad-assets (51 per cent increase in 2009) partly limited profit growth but improved the overall provision coverage.

StanChart also has significant fee income (50 per cent of total income) coming in from services such as cash management, wealth management, principal investments and corporate finance. For 2009, the 22 per cent fall in operating profits for consumer banking was made up by the 36 per cent expansion in wholesale banking profits.

In the year ahead, the strong traction in consumer credit offtake in StanChart's key markets — India, Hong Kong, Korea and Singapore — may aid improvement in consumer banking offtake.

StanChart's Net Interest Margin, which was maintained at 2.5 per cent for 2006-08, fell to 2.3 per cent in 2009. While this was a function of the pressure on interest rates last year, margins may improve significantly from now on the back of the bank's low funding costs, rising rates and demand for credit.

Consumer banking which was a laggard in 2009 too may drive profit growth as the wealth management business revives as the global economy revives. StanChart indicated in its Interim Management Statement for the first quarter of 2010, that the group witnessed improvement in volumes, as the consumer segment increased its contribution to the overall income and profits. There was also increase in lending volumes. StanChart's overall asset quality is reasonable in the global context, especially given its emereging markets focus. The Gross NPA ratio stood at 2 per cent with an overall provision coverage of 70 per cent by end of 2009. The average loan to value is low in both mortgages (50 per cent) and wholesale banking , substantially limiting credit risk.

Credit growth is usually correlated to overall economic activity and on this score investors in StanChart may not have much to worry about. IMF forecasts regions such as Developing Asia, Africa and West Asia may have GDP growth rates of 8.4 per cent, 4.3 per cent, 4.5 per cent for 2010 and 8.4 per cent, 5.3 per cent and 4.8 per cent in 2011. This may have a two-fold impact on business as consumer demand revives and corporates revive borrowing plans. The prospect of a shift from a very easy monetary policy to a slightly tighter one does exist in India, China and Korea. However, StanChart's large low-cost deposit base and its access to low cost funds may help it weather such a phase better than peers.

Offer details: The issue opens on 25 May and closes on 28 May 2010. .












884. Nayak |   Link |  Bookmark | May 23, 2010 8:57:47 AM
Thanks god i have stop payent of my 6 full app. Last time in sjvnl.
883. T.C |   Link |  Bookmark | May 23, 2010 7:42:20 AM
Idr, totaly flop show,only folish investors how don,t know any think about market will invest like sjvnl,nhpc,ntpc,nmdc etch.
882. HEMANT |   Link |  Bookmark | May 23, 2010 3:31:23 AM
THE REAL RATE OF STANDARD CHARTERED BANK IS RS 105 TO RS 110 FOR IDR AS PER THE LISTING IN LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE ON CONVERSION TO RUPEE FOR 10 IDR = 1 SHARE IN LONDON STOCK . IN 20 DAYS WE WILL CO ME TO KNOW THE LOSS DUE THE GREECE DOWN FALL BY THAT TIME IT WILL BE LISTED IN INDIAN STOCK EXCHANGE THE RATE MAY BE RS 100 OR RS 120 DEPENDING ON THE EURO AND DOLLAR IF ALL IS WELL RS WILL BE RS 120 OTHER WISE THINK
881. Anand |   Link |  Bookmark | May 22, 2010 4:58:15 PM
How sameles govt. 18 ka share pubic ko 36 may dekar thaga ,nhpc, 10 ka share 26 may ,sjvnl, bata yah hunar tonay sekha kaha say mayrg jaan swis bank hi jaha pay.
880. Rajesh |   Link |  Bookmark | May 22, 2010 3:43:08 PM
Hi Rama,
R u mad or mental. Pl. let me know.
879. Rama |   Link |  Bookmark | May 22, 2010 1:28:27 PM
883. Rama
Sjvnl 1 month target is rs.1000 ,because 100% divdent and buy back rate 1050, blindly invest in standard chart. Idr 500% retun garanted by sjvnl ipo investors.
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ABOVE MESSAGE IS NOT POSTED BY ME. SOMEBODY IS MISUSING MY NAME. CHITHORGARH STAFF, PLEASE DELETE THAT MESSAGE.
878. newipo |   Link |  Bookmark | May 22, 2010 12:57:16 PM
883 Rama
sjvnl 1000 target whove it is possible? some thanking is wrong? please check revised your messeg.
877. Rama |   Link |  Bookmark | May 22, 2010 12:37:30 PM
Sjvnl 1 month target is rs.1000 ,because 100% divdent and buy back rate 1050, blindly invest in standard chart. Idr 500% retun garanted by sjvnl ipo investors.
876. vivek jain |   Link |  Bookmark | May 22, 2010 12:31:14 PM
As a young capital market participant then, I remember the sense of thrill and excitement of seeing Indian companies getting listed abroad for the first time using the GDR and ADR routes. It was a sort of a vindication of the success of the economic liberalization process undertaken by the Narasimha Rao led Congress Government in the early 1990’s.

The wheel has turned a full circle now and MNCs can be expected to start queuing up to access the vibrant Indian capital market through the Indian Depository Receipt (IDR) route.

The $750 million IDR issue of Standard Chartered Bank (SCB) makes it the first foreign entity to hit the Indian Capital Markets with an IDR issue. Given it is the first ever IDR issue, there is a certain undercurrent of excitement among Indian market-particpants about IDRs.

IDR’s are Indian Depository Receipts and conceptually similar to American Depository Receipts (ADR’s) or Global Depository Receipts (GDR’s). These IDRs are denominated in Indian Rupees issued by a Domestic Depository in India. IDRs as an instrument suggest an ownership interest in a fixed number of underlying equity shares of the Issuer Company (known as Deposited Shares).

The intent behind issuing an IDR is to make it possible for investors to invest in a listed foreign company. Now, since the shares of the foreign company cannot be listed on the Indian bourses, IDRs which are denominated in Indian Rupees would provide the issuer company an opportunity to list on the Indian bourses.

An IDR can be issued by any company which is listed in any country where it is incorporated. However, post the global financial crisis of 2008 and the resilience demonstrated by the Emerging Markets, and more particularly the Indian Economy, has prompted many foreign companies to look at India as a primary destination.

The resilience of the Indian economy is sustainable as it is backed by strong domestic demand. Given the favorable demographics in India, the top managements of foreign conglomerates and MNCs clearly realize that India could be the next big step to business expansion.

The potential for growth offered by the Indian economy would enable the companies to de-risk their business models. Thus, to capitalize on opportunities like enhanced local branding, to target business opportunities, to access a large Indian capital pool and enhance future fund raising capabilities, the creation of an acquisition currency has become a necessity.

This would help these MNCs fund any acquisition in India which would otherwise be impossible only through cash and to help to manage its talent pool through to ESOP’s/ESPS. These are the primary reasons for foreign entities to issue their IDRs at the Indian bourses for trading at the BSE and NSE.

Nevertheless, the listing of IDR’s on Indian bourses would also be beneficial to investors as they would get an opportunity to own an interest in the foreign entity. It would allow an investor to have exposure in overseas companies in a manner similar to the one used to invest in Indian companies, with use of the same demat and bank account.

In the week ahead, we shall put the IDR process and India’s first IDR issue under the scanner. Clearly, the wheels of fortune have turned ……..
875. vivek jain |   Link |  Bookmark | May 22, 2010 12:23:51 PM
Standard Chartered Bank shares are traded on the London stock Exchange and the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. Yesterday Hong Kong was closed and on the London stock exchange one saw huge volatility. The Standard Chartered Bank fluctuated between 1619 pence and 1540.50 pence. The previous day’s close was 1618 pence and the stock closed at 1613 pence down 5 pence. The conversion rate for GBP to Rupees is 67.8023 which translates into closing price in Rupees is Rs 1093.65 or say Rs 1094. Each IDR will represent 1/10th of a share therefore the closing price equivalent would be Rs 109.40 per IDR.

The likely price band would constitute a discount of about 6% at the lower band and a premium of about 2% at the upper band. This would effectively mean the likely price band would be between Rs 103 and Rs 111. The price band would be announced by way of a public announcement in the newspapers on Monday the 24th of May and the issue would open on Tuesday the 25th of May and close on Friday the 28th of May. Retail investors will be eligible for a discount of 5% on the allotment price
874. bj |   Link |  Bookmark | May 22, 2010 11:25:07 AM
I see there are too many sadists who are happy bcoz of bad listing of sjvnl...first of all they shud understand that we have got the shares for 24.7 and not for 26 ... So we are no way in loss...
These are the guys who got stuck in nhpc with 25percent loss and now are happy assuming that we are also in loss !!! Common guys .. we are not in loss !!!
873. bil.k |   Link |  Bookmark | May 22, 2010 9:12:22 AM
i am clever therefore i have stop payments of my cheques and earn intrest, but dunkies take risk and earn loses, it is defalt rated co . by WORLD BANK.
872. Nike |   Link |  Bookmark | May 21, 2010 9:46:46 PM
Sjvnl will sift trade to trade segment due to very high satoria activities.