
Regaal Resources shares jump 29 pc in market debut trade
PTI
Last Updated:
New Delhi, Aug 20 (PTI) Shares of Regaal Resources Ltd, a maize-based speciality product manufacturer, on Wednesday ended with a premium of 29 per cent against the issue price of Rs 102.
The stock started trading at Rs 141.80, a jump of 39 per cent from the issue price on the BSE. During the day, it zoomed 42.84 per cent to Rs 145.70. Shares of the firm ended at Rs 131.65 apiece, up 29 per cent.
On the NSE, the stock listed at Rs 141, up 38.23 per cent. Shares of the firm ended 29 per cent higher at Rs 131.58 each.
The company's market valuation stood at Rs 1,352.35 crore.
The initial public offer of Regaal Resources Ltd got subscribed a huge 159.88 times on the closing day of bidding on Thursday last week, driven by heavy investor demand.
The Rs 306 crore Initial Public Offer (IPO) had a price band of Rs 96-102 per share.
The IPO had a fresh issue of shares worth Rs 210 crore and an Offer For Sale of 94.12 lakh shares valued at Rs 96 crore by promoters, at the upper end of the price band, aggregating the issue size to Rs 306 crore.
Of the fresh issue proceeds, Rs 159 crore will go towards repayment or pre-payment of certain borrowings.
Regaal Resources operates a zero liquid discharge maize milling facility catering to customers in food products, paper, animal feed and adhesives across India, and in export markets such as Nepal and Bangladesh. PTI SUM SUM SHW
view comments
First Published:
Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Loading comments...

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Mint
29 minutes ago
- Mint
Vedanta demerger: Govt's key objections range from loans taken against national assets to liquidity concerns
Mumbai: The ministry of petroleum and natural gas has raised over a dozen objections to the proposed demerger of Vedanta Ltd into five listed companies, saying it could hamper the recovery of dues to the government. The objections include concerns over the company raising foreign loans by offering national oil assets as collateral, said a person directly aware of the government's case. The ministry also objected to Vedanta withholding $578 million in payments to the government as part of the production-sharing agreement for India's largest onshore crude oil block in Rajasthan, which is operated by Vedanta subsidiary Cairn Oil & Gas. Vedanta had announced its plan to demerge into six separately listed entities back in September 2023, aiming to complete the process by March 2025. On Wednesday, the National Company Law Tribunal asked Vedanta to respond within four weeks after the petroleum ministry objected to the proposed demerger, which could be delayed beyond September 2025 due to pending regulatory approvals—particularly from the tribunal. The ministry's other concerns include the liquidity position of Malco Energy, which has revenue- and production-sharing agreements for oil and natural gas with the Indian government. Malco is set to become a part of Vedanta Oil & Gas after the demerger. The ministry made its observations during a hearing at the NCLT in Mumbai, where Vedanta's application for the demerger was heard. The arguments of Vedanta's counsel could not be heard in the court on Wednesday due to a paucity of time. The case is next listed for hearing on 17 September. A spokesperson for Vedanta said that since the matter was sub-judice, the company would not be able to comment. The company will be making its submissions before the NCLT. "The proposed demerger is a strategic step to unlock long-term value by creating sector-focused, pure-play businesses with independent management teams. The petition for sanction of the Scheme was heard by the Hon'ble NCLT on 20 August and the hearing will continue on 17 September. Notably, the NCLT has also observed that arguments in a matter of this scale and significance cannot be concluded in a single hearing and fixed the next date of hearing after discussions with all parties," the spokesperson said. To assuage the concerns of the government, Vedanta has offered to submit an affidavit that it will release the pledge against the national assets against which foreign debt to the tune of ₹1,500-2,000 crore was raised, the person cited earlier said. However, the ministry was not satisfied with the offer. Vedanta has also offered to provide corporate guarantees to the ministry from Vedanta Ltd against the dues of Vedanta Oil & Gas after the demerger. The government has rejected this offer as well. The Vedanta Ltd stock ended 0.3% higher on the BSE on Thursday at ₹446.8. It has gained over 110% since the day the demerger was first announced on 29 September 2023. The benchmark Sensex has gained just under 25% during this period. Rajasthan dispute While Vedanta has offered to assuage the concerns of the ministry with regard to its offshore loans and liquidity position, no such offer has been made regarding the $578 million dispute over the Rajasthan oil and gas block. The dispute dates back to 2020 over revenue-sharing from the block, which produces over a quarter of India's domestic crude oil. The Directorate General of Hydrocarbons disallowed the sharing of almost $1.2 billion of development costs that Vedanta incurred on the development of the block. The case went into arbitration and an Arbitration Tribunal ruled in favour of Vedanta in November 2023. The Indian government then challenged the decision in the Delhi High Court, where it is being heard. Vedanta, however, recognized a benefit of $ 578 million ( ₹4,761 crore) in revenue from operations in FY24 and adjusted it against its liabilities to the government under the production-sharing agreement. However, the government said the award should be lower and has claimed a sum of $224 million from the company. In the NCLT, the petroleum ministry has objected to the company unilaterally enforcing the award even though the amount is yet to be officially quantified by the adjudicating authority and the case is pending before the Delhi High Court. 'The Group is of the view that the GoI computation is prima-facie contrary to the Award including clarifications issued by the Tribunal," as per notes to Vedanta's latest annual earnings report. 'As the Parties are unable to agree on quantum of the calculations, the matter will be decided by the Tribunal in the quantum proceedings." Other objections These are only three of the more than dozen objections raised by the ministry against Vedanta's planned demerger. The ministry also red-flagged the company's decision to demerge into five companies instead of six after receiving the approval of the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) and the two main stock exchanges. On 13 August, Sebi issued an administrative warning to Vedanta for this breach. However, the market regulator's assent to the demerger stands, said a second person aware of the matter. A spokesperson for Vedanta told Mint on Wednesday that Sebi has offered no further comments on the merits of the demerger scheme in the NCLT. Following the demerger, the five firms will be Vedanta Aluminium, Vedanta Oil & Gas, Vedanta Power, Vedanta Iron and Steel and Vedanta Ltd, which will continue as the parent entity and hold shares of Hindustan Zinc. Shareholders of Vedanta will receive one share in each of the new companies.


Economic Times
29 minutes ago
- Economic Times
GoM clears GST 2-slab overhaul, revenue loss in focus
Synopsis India's GST structure is set for simplification. A group of ministers approved a plan to move to a two-slab system. The GST Council may meet in early September for faster implementation. The new structure includes 5%, 18%, and 40% slabs. States are concerned about potential revenue loss. The Department of Revenue will assess the impact. Agencies The simplification of India's goods and services tax (GST) structure took a significant step forward with the group of ministers (GoM) on rate rationalisation unanimously accepting the Centre's proposal to move to a twoslab structure of 5% and 18% with a special 40% levy for sin goods, paving the way for next-generation reforms in the country's eight-year-old indirect tax GST Council, the apex decision-making body for the tax, could meet in the first week of September instead of the second half of next month as planned earlier, to ensure early implementation of the reform in time for Diwali, people familiar with the matter said. The GoM, chaired by Bihar deputy CM Samrat Chaudhary, approved the Centre's proposal to abolish the 12% and 28% rates, shifting goods to the 5%, 18% and 40% slabs. The proposal was unanimously accepted by the six members present —three each from states ruled by the BJP and the opposition—as they all favoured giving relief to the people. All states want ultra-luxury cars and high-end products in the highest slab of 40%.However, some states also wanted the Centre to assess the revenue loss to states due to the reform and ways of compensating them, something they said was missing in the Centre's proposal. 'Both the proposals of the Centre have been accepted by the GoM on rate rationalisation,' Choudhary told reporters after the meeting. The GST Council, which set up the GoM, will discuss the reform proposals item by item at its meeting. Prime Minister Narendra Modi had announced the plan to reform GST during his Independence Day address on August 15, calling it a Diwali gift. A revamped GST is expected to lower prices, boost consumption and drive economic growth amid global economic uncertainty. Revenue concern The biggest concern for states is the revenue loss on account of the changes and the absence of a mechanism for compensation as most of them depend heavily on GST revenue.A recent SBI research report suggested that the Centre's GST reform proposal could cost Rs 85,000 crore to the exchequer annually. The Department of Revenue will conduct an assessment of revenue loss that will be presented to the GST Council.'We have said we are okay with any rate rationalisation proposal, which is pro-people, but we should also know the revenue loss that we are going to suffer,' West Bengal finance minister Chandrima Bhattacharya said. 'Because, ultimately, if a state suffers any loss, then it boils down to the sufferance of the common man.'She suggested amending the GST law to allow imposing a levy over and above the 40% permissible rate, to maintain overall tax rates on these products once the compensation cess ends. Other opposition states supported that view. Telangana deputy chief minister Mallu Bhatti Vikramarka said rate rationalisation must be balanced by ensuring that revenues of the states are protected. Otherwise, welfare schemes meant for poor people and the middle class will be hit as will infrastructure projects, he said. He suggested that the GST rate on sin or luxury goods be increased to current levels and the additional amount collected be given to the states.


Economic Times
29 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Punching error in block deal sparks sharp swings in Clean Science shares
Mumbai: A routine block trade on the exchanges involving the promoters of specialty chemical maker Clean Science and Technology turned tense after a blundered execution by one of the brokers. ADVERTISEMENT A 'punching error' during the execution of a stake sale of the company's promoters by one of its brokers Avendus Spark Institutional Equities (SIEPL) on Thursday morning resulted in many more shares being sold, creating some nervous moments for the company's founders and other investors. In an exchange filing, Clean Science said Spark is taking "immediate remedial steps to review the situation and address the matter responsibly." "SIEPL (Avendus Spark) has informed the Sellers (Clean's promoters) that on account of an error at SIEPL's end, the sell orders were for a significantly higher number of shares than what SIEPL was authorised and instructed to sell for and on behalf of the Sellers," said Clean Science and Technology in an exchange Spark Institutional Equities said the execution error in the Clean Science trade is being 'remediated' in line with exchange regulations."There is no impact to the seller owing to this error nor is there any loss on the trade. Our focus has been on resolving the matter promptly and transparently," it said. ADVERTISEMENT Clean's promoters were scheduled to offload a 24% stake in the company in a deal worth over ₹2,626.5 crore on Thursday. The total traded value of the stock on BSE was at ₹7,073.85 crore, and ₹3,440.27 crore on NSE. The company's market capitalisation was at ₹12,205.33 crore on Thursday's close. Unlock 500+ Stock Recos on App The total traded quantity of the stock was at 6.53 crore shares on BSE, against a two-week average quantity of 8,728 shares. (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)