logo
Yes Bank bulk deal: Carlyle group sells 2.6% stake in Yes Bank for ₹1,775 crore; stock down 10%

Yes Bank bulk deal: Carlyle group sells 2.6% stake in Yes Bank for ₹1,775 crore; stock down 10%

Mint2 days ago

Global investment firm Carlyle group on Tuesday sold a 2.6 per cent stake in private sector lender Yes Bank for ₹ 1,775 crore through open market transactions.
The development comes after State Bank of India and seven other lenders last month announced that they will sell 20 per cent of their combined stake in Yes Bank to Japan's Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation for ₹ 13,483 crore.
US-based Carlyle, through its affiliate CA Basque Investments, sold a total of 82 crore shares, representing a 2.62 per cent stake in Mumbai-based Yes Bank on the NSE and BSE, as per the bulk deal data on the bourses.
The shares were disposed in the price range of ₹ 21.61-21.68 apiece, taking the combined transaction value to ₹ 1,774.89 crore.
After the share sale, Carlyle's arm CA Basque Investments' holding in Yes Bank declined to 4.22 per cent from 6.84 per cent.
Details of the buyers of Yes Bank's shares could not be ascertained on the BSE and the National Stock Exchange (NSE).
Shares of Yes Bank declined 10.40 per cent to close at ₹ 20.85 apiece on the BSE, and it fell 10.01 per cent to settle at ₹ 20.95 per piece on the NSE.
Last month, SBI and seven other lenders announced that they will sell 20 per cent of their combined stake in Yes Bank to Japan's SMBC for a consideration of ₹ 13,483 crore, making it the largest cross-border investment in the Indian banking sector.
Following the completion of the transaction, SMBC will become the single-largest shareholder of Mumbai-based Yes Bank.
Of the 20 per cent stake, SBI will dilute a 13.19 per cent stake in Yes Bank in favour of SMBC for a consideration of ₹ 8,889 crore, while 6.81 per cent shareholding will be offloaded by seven other lenders, including Axis Bank, Bandhan Bank, Federal Bank, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, IDFC First Bank and Kotak Mahindra Bank for about ₹ 4,594 crore.
SBI and the seven investor lenders had invested in the bank as part of the YES Bank Reconstruction Scheme in March 2020. Mumbai-headquartered SBI, which owned a 24 per cent stake in Yes Bank, will be left with a little over 10 per cent stake after the dilution.
SMBC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, Inc (SMFG). SMFG is the second largest banking group in Japan with total assets of USD 2 trillion as of December 2024 with strong global presence.
For the fourth quarter ended March 2025, Yes Bank reported a 63 per cent jump in standalone net profit at ₹ 738 crore as compared to ₹ 451.9 crore in the corresponding quarter a year ago.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nine new DMDs at SBI, 28 CGMs promoted in annual exercise
Nine new DMDs at SBI, 28 CGMs promoted in annual exercise

Time of India

time6 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Nine new DMDs at SBI, 28 CGMs promoted in annual exercise

State Bank of India (SBI), the country's biggest government asset by market value, has promoted nine chief general managers (CGMs) as deputy managing directors (DMDs) in an annual exercise, people familiar with the information said. As many as 28 people have been elevated to the CGM level, similar to the 27 promoted last year, Four out of nine DMDs have already been posted to their respective positions, while five others are waiting for the final order of the department where they will take charge. SBI has 24 DMDs, each handling remits ranging from corporate banking, markets and treasury, recovery, retail, compliance, finance, operations, etc. The names of the new DMDs have already been updated at the bank's website. Rajeev Kumar, who was CGM at the bank's international banking group (IBG) in SBI's Mumbai headquarters, has already taken charge as DMD internal audit at the bank's Hyderabad office. SBI Card CEO, Salila Pande, has also been promoted as DMD and will continue with her current responsibilities she assumed in April. Ramesh Srinivas Rao has taken charge as DMD commercial clients group I (CCG I) from Gulshan Malik, who retired on May 31. Satyendra Kumar Singh has taken charge of CCG II, which was headed by Amitava Chatterjee, who took over as J&K Bank CEO at the end of December 2024. Both CCG I and II services large and medium sized companies (except conglomerates), out of the bank's head office in Mumbai. Rajesh Kumar, who was heading the bank's Hyderabad circle, will take over as DMD, agriculture and SME in the bank's corporate headquarters in Mumbai from Surender Rana, who retires in July. Other CGMs promoted to DMD position are Arvind Kumar Singh, Chander Shekhar Sharma, Parminder Singh and Anindya Sunder Paul. They await portfolios and will take over based on retirements or transfers. The DMDs typically report to managing directors (MDs). SBI has four MDs, each handling corporate banking and subsidiaries, retail and operations, risk, compliance and stressed assets recovery and international banking, markets and technology. The MD portfolios are distributed according to the discretion of the SBI chairman. SBI is India's largest lender with Rs 66.79 lakh crore in total assets, much higher than Rs 39.10 lakh crore of total assets of HDFC Bank , its nearest rival, as of March 2025. With more than 22,500 branches and 63,580 ATMs across India, it has the widest network in the country. Economic Times WhatsApp channel )

Apple gives Tata India iPhone repair business as partnership expands, sources say
Apple gives Tata India iPhone repair business as partnership expands, sources say

Time of India

time11 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Apple gives Tata India iPhone repair business as partnership expands, sources say

Apple has brought in Tata Group to handle repairs for iPhones and MacBook devices in its fast-growing Indian market, signalling the Indian conglomerate's deepening role in the U.S. tech giant's supply chain, two people familiar with the matter said. As Apple looks beyond China for manufacturing, Tata has fast emerged as its key supplier and already assembles iPhones for local and foreign markets at three facilities in south India, with one of them also making some iPhone components. In its latest partnership expansion, Tata is taking over the mandate from an Indian unit of Taiwan's Wistron, ICT Service Management Solutions, and will carry out such after-sales repairs from its Karnataka iPhone assembly campus, both sources said. The market for repairs is only going to boom in India, the world's second-biggest smartphone market, as iPhone sales skyrocket. Counterpoint Research estimates around 11 million iPhones were sold in India last year, giving Apple a 7 per cent market share, compared to just 1 per cent in 2020. The latest contract award signals Apple's growing confidence on Tata as it hopes to win more business from the world's most valuable smartphone company. "Tata's deepening partnership with Apple could also pave the groundwork for Apple directly selling refurbished devices in India, like how it does in the United States currently," said Prabhu Ram, a vice president at Cybermedia Research. The takeover from ICT by Tata is currently ongoing, both sources said, who declined to be named as they were not authorized to speak on the matter. Apple and Wistron did not respond to requests for comment, while a spokesperson for Tata declined to comment. While Apple's official service centres across India can do basic repairs, they would now ship phones and laptops to Tata's facility for more complex issues. Wistron's ICT however will continue to service other clients excluding Apple, one of the sources said. Amid an impending threat of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs on China, India is also emerging as a favoured destination for iPhone exports. Apple CEO Tim Cook has said the bulk of iPhones sold in the United States during June quarter will be made at factories in India.

Lower wage growth impacting consumption; tax cuts and rate cuts tools to spur growth: Report
Lower wage growth impacting consumption; tax cuts and rate cuts tools to spur growth: Report

Time of India

time11 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Lower wage growth impacting consumption; tax cuts and rate cuts tools to spur growth: Report

Weakening wage and job growth cycle is impacting consumption sentiment , and tax cuts and rate cuts will help accelerate momentum, according to a report by ICICI Bank Global Markets. The report highlights that wage growth for listed Indian companies nearly halved in the financial year (FY) 2025, slowing to 7.5 per cent from an average of 15 per cent year-on-year (YoY) between FY22 and FY24, impacting consumption. The deceleration in wage growth can be attributed to the tepid demand and global economic uncertainty. The report adds that the slowdown, coupled with high inflation and elevated interest rates, has eroded consumers' discretionary income, particularly in urban areas. Spending across sectors has dampened. "Lower interest rates should lead to further recovery in consumption as repo-linked loans get repriced lower and reduce the interest outgo for consumers," according to ICICI Bank Global Markets report . "We believe further monetary support is required to spur consumption when inflation is easing," it said. Backing its assertion, the report added that Fast-Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) sales in urban centres are trailing rural markets. In contrast, passenger vehicle sales growth has sharply decelerated to 4.5 per cent in FY25 from 8.8 per cent the previous year. On the job growth front, the report added that once a strong hiring engine, the IT sector continues to grapple with demand challenges from tech disruptions, monetary tightening, and trade volatility. Net hiring peaked at 293,000 in FY22 and saw a net contraction of 70,000 by FY24. The Indian economy grew by 6.5 per cent in real terms in the recently concluded financial year 2024-25, according to the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation's official data. While the economic growth was 7.4 per cent in the January-March quarter (Q4) of FY25. This was a sharp rise from the 6.2 per cent recorded in the previous quarter. Given the underlying weakness in urban demand , the government announced an income tax relief of Rs 1 trillion in the Union Budget 2025-26. The other factors favouring a consumption recovery are lower food inflation as well as the recent uptick seen in GST collections. In the last two months we have seen a visible acceleration in GST collections, with gross GST revenues increasing by 16.4 per cent YoY in May and 12.6 per cent YoY in April, respectively.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store