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India's Schloss and Aegis Vopak initial public offerings sold out on the final day. Retail demand is subdued

Institutional buyers pushed the initial public offering of Schloss Bangalore, a hotel owned by Leela Hotels, and Aegis Vopak Terminals through on Wednesday. Retail demand was weak.

India's IPO Market is still finding its feet after a slow year-to-date, even though it has seen blockbuster listings by companies like Swiggy and NTPC Green 2024.

India's blue chip Nifty 50 index has risen nearly 5% in the past year, but it is still over 5% below its record high levels of September 2024. This is due to uncertainty around global tariffs as well as concerns about their impact on trade.

LSEG data shows that proceeds from IPOs have fallen by 29% this year compared to last, and the number of issues has dropped by 38%. IPO hopefuls such as LG Electronics India have either rescheduled plans or reduced their issue size.

Schloss issued new shares, and Brookfield, an existing investor in the $409-million IPO, sold some of its holdings. Aegis is a joint venture of Dutch tank storage company Vopak. It only sold new shares as part of its $328 million IPO.

Retail investors who usually look to pocket listing profits bid only 83% of the reserved portion on Schloss' books while Aegis received just 77%.

Foreign investors and banks as well as institutional buyers bid on Schloss shares at a rate of over seven times and Aegis shares at a rate of over three times.

Retail investors and high net worth individuals showed a lack of enthusiasm because they felt valuations were too high, especially since markets are still in flux and global uncertainties are a concern, said Astha JAIN, a Hem Securities research analyst.

Schloss wants to be valued at $1.7 billion while Aegis Vopak aims for $3.05 billion. Both firms will begin trading on Indian stock markets on June 2. (Reporting and editing by Maju Sam in Bengaluru, Nandan Mandayam and Hritam Mukherjee from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)