The Securities and Exchange Board
of India (SEBI) has recently proposed certain amendments relaxing the lock-in
requirements in relation to promoter shareholding and shareholding of
non-promoters. The proposed amendments have been notified and are in effect
from August 13, 2021.
SEBI has approved to relax the
lock-in requirements in relation to promoter shareholding to the extent of 20%
of the post issue capital (the minimum promoter contribution). This has been
done in such a way that the lock-in has now been reduced to a period of 18
months from the date of allotment in the initial public offering (IPO)/ further
public offering.
Earlier, the lock-in requirement was for a period of 3 years, only in the following cases: a) If the object of the issue involves only offer for sale; b) If the object of the issue involves only raising of funds for other than for capital expenditure for a project (i.e. end use of more than 50 percentage of the fresh issue should not be for capital expenditure for a project); or c) In case of combined offering (fresh issue + offer for sale), the object of the issue involves financing for other than capital expenditure for a project (i.e. end use of more than 50 percentage of the fresh issue should not be for capital expenditure for a project excluding the offer for sale portion).
Also, in all the above-mentioned
cases, the promoter shareholding in excess of the Minimum Promoter Contribution
will be locked-in for a period of 6 months, instead of the erstwhile lock-in
requirement of a period of 1 year.
Plus, with respect to the lock-in
pertaining to the pre-IPO securities held by non-promoter shareholders, the
lock-in requirement has been reduced to a period of 6 months as against the 1
year lock-in requirement earlier.
The relaxations have been
introduced by SEBI at a time when the Indian capital markets have witnessed
several companies going public. The latest moves of SEBI will further encourage
more companies to pursue the listing of its shares.
The relaxations in the lock-in
restrictions for non-promoters will further boost the sentiment of such
non-promoter shareholders. This is important because there has been a change in
the ownership structure of the Indian companies with private equity firms and
the institutional investors holding significant shareholding in many companies.