India’s busy market for initial public offerings is set to get a boost as shares of Tata Technologies Ltd., the first company from the salt-to-software conglomerate to list since 2004, begin trading in Mumbai Thursday.
Tata Technologies’ IPO raised 30.4 billion rupees ($365 million), with shares being sold at 500 rupees each, the top of the marketed range. Demand exceeded shares on offer by 69 times, as investors piled into the engineering unit of luxury carmaker Jaguar Land Rover’s owner Tata Motors Ltd.
The sale comes as India logs a record number of listings in 2023, fueled by a booming stock market and optimism about the country’s economic growth. The frenzy reached a fever pitch last week when first-time share sales from five issuers, including Tata Technologies, garnered a combined 2.5 trillion rupees in application amount.
“Strong optimism in the domestic market has fueled the surge in IPO listings in the last two years,” Jahnavi Prabhakar, an economist at Bank of Baroda wrote in a note on Wednesday. “A large number of IPOs have been listed at a premium, making this a win-win situation for investors.”
While the 205 IPOs in India so far in 2023 have mostly been small — only two raised more than $500 million — about 80% of the newcomers are trading above their offer prices versus 62% in Asia. Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency Ltd., a state-run lender to renewable energy projects, surged 88% in its trading debut Wednesday.
Tata Technologies provides engineering research and development services along with product development and digital solutions to global OEMs and their key suppliers. The company is looking to expand into aerospace, transportation and electric vehicles.
Its automotive business delivers about 70% of sales, with Tata Motors and JLR among key clients and Vietnam’s Vinfast emerging as a major customer.