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Jana Small Finance Bank refiles draft papers with Sebi to launch its IPO

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Jana Small Finance Bank refiles draft papers with Sebi to launch its IPO

Jana Small Finance Bank has filed its draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) with market regulator Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) to launch funds through an initial public offering (IPO). The company is looking to raise Rs 575 crore through the sale of fresh equity shares.

The issue also includes an offer-for-sale (OFS) aggregating up to 4.05 million equity shares by Investor shareholders including Client Rosehill, CVCIGP II Employee Rosehill, Global Impact Funds, Growth Partnership II Ajay Tandon CoInvestment Trust, Growth Partnership II Siva Shankar CoInvestment Trust and Hero Enterprise Partner Ventures.

The net proceeds from the fresh issue are proposed to be utilised towards augmentation of Bank’s Tier – I capital base, to meet future capital requirements such as organic growth and expansion and to comply with the regulatory requirements, along with general corporate purposes. Proceeds from the fresh stake sale will go to selling shareholders.

The bank, in consultation with the lead managers, can consider a pre-IPO share allotment not exceeding Rs 115 crore. In such case, the fresh issue size will be slashed. According to Fitch Report, Jana Small Finance Bank Limited is fourth largest small finance Bank in terms of AUM and the fourth largest small finance bank in terms of deposit size as at March 31, 2023.

As at March 31, 2023, Jana Small Finance had 754 banking outlets, including 272 banking outlets in unbanked rural centres, in 22 states and two union territories. As of March 31, 2023 Jana Small Finance Bank has served nearly 1.2 crore customers since 2008, including 45.7 lakh active customers.

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The lender will allocate 50 per cent of shares to the qualified institutional bidders, while non-institutional investors will get 15 per cent of allocations. Remaining 35 per cent of shares shall be allocated towards the retail investors.

Axis Capital, ICICI Securities and SBI Capital Markets are the book-running lead managers to the issue, while KFin Technologies has been appointed as the registrar.

The lender commenced operations as a small finance bank in March 2018. In April 2021, Jana filed for an IPO but had to delay its fundraising plan due to the pandemic. The Reserve Bank of (RBI) India mandates that all small finance banks have to list within five years of starting operations.

Also read: Maruti Suzuki Q1 results preview: 120-160% jump in profit likely; margins to expand

Also read: Hot stocks on July 31, 2023: Adani Green, Gland Pharma, IRFC, Maruti Suzuki and more

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A public route for investors into growing private finance

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A public route for investors into growing private finance

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Start-ups and companies seeking scale-up funding no longer flock to the stock market as readily as they once did. Many bypass the high street banks too. The reason? They have other options thanks to the ready availability of different types of funding from private markets, at least for those businesses showing fast growth potential.

Private capital markets, which have grown significantly in recent years, offer services ranging from debt funding, seed and venture capital to minority stakes and full buyouts. 

Their efforts to rival public markets have been helped by bouts of volatility and illiquidity that have hit stock markets. The tougher life gets for listed companies, the more companies are tempted to go or stay private. Being on a public market comes with extra costs, the legal obligation to be fully transparent on all aspects of the business and the risk of a lifeless share price. Increasing numbers of listed companies are being taken private as their discounted shares make them easy prey. 

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Ironically, one way for investors to tap into the growth and profitability of private markets is through investing in companies that use public stock markets to raise capital for their private funding operations. Intermediate Capital provides a range of private funding, spanning debt, mezzanine finance and private equity. Petershill Partners, whose parent is Goldman Sachs, provides capital and expertise to private capital managers.

Investment trusts have invested in private markets for decades, and range from Pantheon International, which specialises in private equity assets, to Scottish Mortgage, which allocates a proportion of its portfolio to unquoted companies. Lucrative returns are not guaranteed and it has become an increasingly crowded market, which brings additional risks. Investors should take care to avoid overexposure and to research the available options properly.

Intermediate Capital (Hold)

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Fed’s preferred inflation gauge shows price increases cooled in April

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Fed’s preferred inflation gauge shows price increases cooled in April

The latest reading of the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge showed price increases slowed in April as inflation remained above the Fed’s 2% target. The release comes as investors have been closely watching data releases for signs of how President Trump’s tariff policy is impacting the economy.

The “core” Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index, which strips out food and energy costs and is closely watched by the central bank, rose 2.5% on an annual basis, in line with expectations and lower than the 2.7% seen in March. Core prices rose 0.1% in April from the prior month, in line with expectations and the monthly increase seen in March.

On a yearly basis, PCE increased by 2.1%, below the 2.2% economists had expected.

The release is yet another sign that while economists and consumers alike expect Trump’s tariffs to push prices higher, the inflationary impact from policy largely isn’t showing up in hard economic data. Friday morning’s release reflects the month of April, the first month in which a large portion of Trump’s tariffs were in effect.

It does not include any impacts from the 90-day tariff pause between the US and China.

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“The increased tariffs have not yet worked their way into the consumer inflation readings, but we anticipate that the improved inflation trend will reverse in the second half of the year as companies are forced to begin passing along a portion of the increased tariffs in order to protect profit margins,” Nationwide chief economist Kathy Bostjancic wrote in a research note on Friday.

Read more: What Trump’s tariffs mean for the economy and your wallet

On Wednesday, minutes from the Federal Reserve’s May meeting revealed officials are growing increasingly concerned about how Trump’s policies could impact its fight against inflation.

“Almost all participants commented on the risk that inflation could prove to be more persistent than expected,” the minutes read.

Investors and consumers alike have been closely watching for any price increases due to President Trump’s tariffs. (RONALDO SCHEMIDT/AFP via Getty Images) · RONALDO SCHEMIDT via Getty Images

Josh Schafer is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X @_joshschafer.

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Macroeconomy, Finance, and Procurement Among China’s Legislative Priorities – The US-China Business Council

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Macroeconomy, Finance, and Procurement Among China’s Legislative Priorities – The US-China Business Council
On May 14, China’s National People’s Congress and State Council released their legislative plans for 2025, offering a window into economic and social priorities. Included are a landmark law to guide macroeconomic development planning, stricter regulation of financial markets, and legal tools to respond to foreign sanctions.
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