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Foreign firms list India units to repatriate profits

Created at 3 Jun · 6:26 AM2 sources↑ Market-relevant2 events
IN SHORT

Foreign companies are listing their Indian units via secondary offerings to send billions of dollars back to their home countries, driven by high stock valuations in India. This trend is causing significant capital outflows and impacting the Indian rupee.

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Who's Involved

Foreign companies
listing Indian units to repatriate profits
Indian rupee
impacted by capital outflows
Foreign firms list India units to repatriate profits

↳ Why This Matters

This trend of foreign firms using India's IPO market to repatriate profits can lead to substantial capital outflows, potentially destabilizing the Indian rupee and impacting the country's broader financial stability.

Key facts

  • Foreign companies are listing their Indian units through secondary offerings.
  • These offerings aim to repatriate billions of dollars to home countries.
  • High stock valuations in India are driving this trend.
  • The activity is causing significant capital outflows from India.
  • The trend is impacting the Indian rupee.

Foreign companies are increasingly leveraging India's booming IPO market, not to raise new capital, but to repatriate substantial profits back to their home countries. These transactions are primarily secondary offerings, where existing shares are sold, rather than primary offerings that would inject fresh funds into the Indian economy. The primary driver for this trend is the high stock valuations currently observed in the Indian market, making it an opportune moment for these firms to cash out. This wave of profit repatriation is leading to significant capital outflows from India, which in turn is exerting downward pressure on the Indian rupee. While some Indian officials have voiced concerns about these outflows, there have been no indications of immediate regulatory curbs being implemented.

Frequently asked questions

Foreign companies are listing their Indian units through secondary offerings to repatriate billions of dollars back to their home countries, taking advantage of high stock valuations in India.

These listings are causing significant capital outflows from India and are impacting the value of the Indian rupee.

While some officials have expressed concern, no curbs have been indicated at this time.

What Happens Next

01Officials to monitor capital outflows and their impact on the Indian rupee.
02Potential for regulatory measures if outflows become excessive.

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Cadence

How It Developed

4 Jun · 5:47 AM
The new article explains that foreign firms are using Indian IPOs for secondary offerings to repatriate profits, driven by high valuations.
Economic Times via PiQSuite
3 Jun · 6:02 AM
Dubai-based Apparel Group is reportedly exploring an IPO for its Indian business, according to sources.
Bloomberg | Markets via PiQSuite

Sources

T1
Dubai-Based Apparel Group Said to Explore IPO for India Businessm.piqsuite.com
T1
Global firms exploit India's IPO boom to take profits back to home countriesm.piqsuite.com

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