Promoter stake in India’s leading family-owned companies has increased marginally to 51.7 per cent in June this year from 51 per cent in June 2005.
Overall, promoter stake in top listed companies has declined to 48.9 per cent from 54.4 per cent 10 years ago.
This has been led by public-sector undertakings, as the government has divested its stake to raise resources.
The government’s stake in PSUs declined to 66.5 per cent on an average from a high of 78.2 per cent in June 2008 and 74.2 per cent in June 2005.
As PSUs remain the largest block on the bourses in terms of market capitalisation, their ownership pattern reflects on the entire universe of companies.
The global parents of listed multinational companies in India, however, were on a buying spree during the 10-year period, regardless of the underlying market conditions.
Promoter stake in listed MNCs rose nearly a quarter -- to 62 per cent from 49 per cent in June 2005.
Analysts attribute this to a spate of buybacks and open offers from global majors after the market regulator liberalised the takeover code in 2012.
MNCs’ efforts have been aided by record low interest rates in their home markets and a global rush for high-yielding emerging market assets.
A Business Standard analysis of BSE-200 companies has taken into account 153 companies whose comparable shareholding, market capitalisation and finances are available since 2004-05.
Promoter stake is calculated by adding the value of stake in these companies.
Of the 153 companies in the sample, 92 are family-owned, 31 are PSUs, 21 Indian subsidiaries of global MNCs and nine independent companies with no defined promoters.
The promoters of family-owned companies used the bear run on Dalal Street between 2010 and 2012 to raise their stake in companies.
The bulk of this increase happened between June 2010 and June 2012, when the stock market was falling.
The BSE Sensex moved in a narrow range during the period, from 16,300 to 17,500, providing promoters ample opportunity to raise stake through share buybacks and incremental equity funding of their capital-hungry
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