Promoter holding in an IPO refers to the percentage of shares owned by the company’s promoter before and after the public issue.
This is the percentage of shares held by the promoters (founders, owners, key stakeholders) before the IPO opens.
It shows how much control promoters have in the company before bringing in public investors.
After the IPO, when new shares are issued to the public, the promoters’ percentage holding usually decreases because the total number of shares increases.
This is called dilution of promoter holding
Example
Let’s understand how fresh issue and offer for sale (OFS) affect promoter holding:
Example: Shanti Gold International IPO was conducted through fresh issue of 18,096,000 shares. The number of shares promoters owe (pre and post-issue) was fixed to 53,989,200 but as the total number of shares post-issue got increased from 54,000,000 to 72,096,000 shares, the promoters stake decreased from 99.99% to 74.89%.
Example: Travel Food Services IPO of Rs 2,000 crore was entirely an OFS. The total shareholding pre and post-issue in this IPO was 1,31,679,484 shares. But as promoters sold stake in the company their stake decreased from 1,31,679,484 shares (100% stake) to 1,13,493,870 (86.19%).
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