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New
Delhi: The government of India, majority owner of
the State Bank of India (SBI), is mulling a change in
strategy for sale of its shares in the equity markets.
It
may, instead, ask the largest banking group in the country
to, go in for a two-stage sale that would see it initially
offer a combination of rights issue and preference shares
in the first stage and then diluting its stake through
a sale of shares in the domestic and international markets.
The
rights / preference share issue would actually result
in the stake holding of the government rising in the short
term, before its eventual dilution through a sale in the
open markets.
The
move is being considered post-ICICI Bank''s "successful"
follow-on public issue in the markets last week. What
would have set the government thinking would have been
the extremely lukewarm response that the offer received
from the retail segment.
The
government currently holds a 59.73-per cent stake in SBI,
which will be formally transferred to it on 29 June, by
the Reserve Bank of India.
An
amendment to the Act that governs SBI is likely to be
cleared by Parliament during the monsoon session, allowing
for a reduction in the government''s stake to 51%. The
amendment will also clear the way for a sale of preference
shares.
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