It was not just that support
from the DFIs was crucial to financing investment at the margin, but the
nature of capital mobilised from the market also indicates a bias in
favour of debt. As Chart 3 shows, in the past, as during 1992-93 to
1995-96, in years when significant sums of capital were mobilised, a
substantially larger share came from the issue of equity rather than
debentures. If active markets help firms to mobilise capital through
equity issues, that would be the preferred option since risks are shared
with the investor, whereas creditors have to be paid interest routinely
and given precedence in case of liquidation. Interestingly, however,
towards the end of the 1990s and early into the next decade, when the
record with mobilisation of capital from the markets has been reasonably
good, firms have had to rely on debentures rather than equity. Clearly,
investor preference was for debentures rather than equity, indicating that
the capital gains and returns expected from the latter were overshadowed
by the security of the former.
Chart 3 >>
All this
suggests that two features of the remarkable performance
of the markets in 2003-04 in terms of delivering new
capital against shares that were not previously being
traded are of utmost significance. First, the important
role of the FIIs in sustaining the boom in markets and
in acquiring the shares of the six PSUs that ensured the
record capital mobilisation figure. Second, the fact
that there was one extremely attractive PSU, namely ONGC,
whose share had been put on offer.
Even
within days of the opening of the issue of shares of some of these PSUs,
the interest of foreign institutional investors was obvious. For example,
they accounted for 75 and 55 per cent respectively of the demand for IPCL
and CMC shares by February 26, 2004. Therefore, the government's real
concern was not with these companies, but with IBP. In the case of that
company, the FIIs were not interested at all, accounting for just 2 per
cent of total claims. Unfortunately, retail investors, who were important
targets of the disinvestment exercise, were not the ones who helped shore
up the issue finally, since they accounted for just 6 per cent of demand.
The prime role was played by the financial institutions and mutual funds
that had come forward to take up 44 and 36 per cent of the demand, at a
time when the issue was still not oversubscribed. Given Disinvestment
Minister Shourie's alarmist tantrums when the issue was not being
responded to, it does appear that the government had "persuaded" the
institutions to fill the gap.
Compare
this with the performance of the ONGC issue. The sale of 10 per cent of
ONGC shares, which was the largest-ever public issue in the country, was
fully subscribed within 10 minutes of the opening of the offer. The
immediate surge in demand on the first day of the issue came mainly from
FIIs who accounted for bids amounting to over Rs 18,000 crore. Retail
investors applied for just 13,520 shares, compared with 26.14 crore shares
that the FIIs bid for. According to subscription details, FIIs accounted
for over 87 per cent of the total bids made on the first day. Finally, the
issue was oversubscribed six times. There was a further twist to the
story. The media has it that Warren Buffet pumped in around $1 billion to
acquire a large chunk of shares.
This kind of interest on the part of the FIIs and by investors like Buffet
who virtually "lead the herd", suggests that the pricing of the shares was
such that they were so lucrative that the offer could not be refused.
Associated with the success of the issue may be, a substantial loss in
terms of the value of the assets that the government has given up. There
are bound to be questions regarding the price band in which the shares of
the different PSUs were offered. It is widely known that given
imperfections, prevailing market prices are no indicator of the true value
of a financial asset. But even such comparisons are suggestive. There were
very few ONGC shares floating in the market, but evidence from the other
firms is telling. Thus, IPCL shares were
being offered at a floor price of Rs. 170, which was well below the Rs.
195.70 at which the share was being quoted at the National Stock Exchange
just before the offer opened. The corresponding figures were Rs. 475 and
Rs. 541.50 for CMC and Rs. 620 and 717.75 for IBP.
The
figures also make sense in the light of other evidence. One puzzling
feature of the data on mobilisation of capital through the market is that
during the period 1998-99 to 2001-02, the share of new (as opposed to
existing) companies in total capital mobilised was extremely high (Chart
4). But, these were the years when additional mobilisation occurred
largely through debentures. There seems to be a reversal in 2003-04, which
is clearly a year when mobilisation through equity would overwhelmingly
dominate. Interestingly, that also happens to be a year when the sale of
equity by existing and highly profitable companies would account for an
overwhelming share of the mobilisation. The message therefore appears
clear. The experience of 2003-04 is not one that points to a
transformation of India's stock markets into a cash cow for entrepreneurs
with new investment ideas. It is proof that while the capital market
remains one in which profit hunters trade risks in secondary markets,
there would be periodic primary market booms whenever speculation spills
over into a thirst for even new shares or when the government desperate to
mobilise budgetary resources and/or shore up its "reformist" image puts on
sale the best PSUs, at what are seen as bargain prices. The entrepreneur
with an eye to the small investor's wallet has little cause to cheer.
Chart 4 >>