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Time of India
5 days ago
- Business
- Time of India
Why are more promoters pledging their shares in Nifty 500 companies?
In the March quarter, shares of several companies, which saw a rise in promoter pledges, had fallen 30-50%. During January-March, promoter stake pledges increased for 27 Nifty 500 companies, including Aadhar Housing Finance and Max Financial Services. While pledging isn't inherently alarming, it raises concerns when a company's fundamentals are weak, potentially amplifying negative impacts if business performance is already questionable. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Mumbai: Promoters' stake pledges went up for 27 companies out of the Nifty 500 companies during January-March, compared with 25 companies in the previous quarter, according to data from Primedatabase. Aadhar Housing Finance Max Financial Services and Raymond Lifestyles were among the companies that saw promoters pledging their holdings during the or shareholders, put up their shares as collateral for loans . While promoters placing their shares as collateral is not uncommon, sudden increases in such pledging catch the attention of the investor community."Pledging of shares in itself is not necessarily a concern and may be a means of leveraging the stake when markets are performing well," said Abhilash Pagaria, head of Alternative and Quantitative Research, Nuvama. "However, if a company's fundamentals are not sound, then it can be a sign of caution.""If a company's business fundamentals are already under the scanner and there is pledging of shares, then it can amplify the negative impact and result in the shares declining," he fall in stock prices could also lead to an increase in share pledges by promoters as lenders seek fresh shares to make up for the drop in value of the collateral. In the March quarter, shares of several companies, which saw a rise in promoter pledges, had fallen 30-50%."When promoter pledges increase, it can indicate the genuine need for capital and tend to move up due to a decline in markets as witnessed in the March quarter," said Manish Bhandari, CEO, Vallum are wary of companies with consistently high pledging of stakes by promoters, as in the past, there have been some instances of these founders defaulting on the loan, forcing the lenders to sell the pledged shares in the open market to make up for the non-payment. "A higher amount of shares can be pledged if the share price falls, as part of margin call; however, this is not a concern unless the increase is substantial of around 30-40%," said Bhandari.


Economic Times
5 days ago
- Business
- Economic Times
Why are more promoters pledging their shares in Nifty 500 companies?
Agencies Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel Mumbai: Promoters' stake pledges went up for 27 companies out of the Nifty 500 companies during January-March, compared with 25 companies in the previous quarter, according to data from Primedatabase. Aadhar Housing Finance Max Financial Services and Raymond Lifestyles were among the companies that saw promoters pledging their holdings during the or shareholders, put up their shares as collateral for loans . While promoters placing their shares as collateral is not uncommon, sudden increases in such pledging catch the attention of the investor community."Pledging of shares in itself is not necessarily a concern and may be a means of leveraging the stake when markets are performing well," said Abhilash Pagaria, head of Alternative and Quantitative Research, Nuvama. "However, if a company's fundamentals are not sound, then it can be a sign of caution.""If a company's business fundamentals are already under the scanner and there is pledging of shares, then it can amplify the negative impact and result in the shares declining," he fall in stock prices could also lead to an increase in share pledges by promoters as lenders seek fresh shares to make up for the drop in value of the collateral. In the March quarter, shares of several companies, which saw a rise in promoter pledges, had fallen 30-50%."When promoter pledges increase, it can indicate the genuine need for capital and tend to move up due to a decline in markets as witnessed in the March quarter," said Manish Bhandari, CEO, Vallum are wary of companies with consistently high pledging of stakes by promoters, as in the past, there have been some instances of these founders defaulting on the loan, forcing the lenders to sell the pledged shares in the open market to make up for the non-payment. "A higher amount of shares can be pledged if the share price falls, as part of margin call; however, this is not a concern unless the increase is substantial of around 30-40%," said Bhandari.


Business Recorder
30-05-2025
- Business
- Business Recorder
Foreign investors raise bets that India stock market rally may stall
Foreign investors are becoming more cautious about the Indian stock market, indicating a three-month rally may run out of legs despite retail traders growing optimistic, according to monthly derivatives data analysed by two brokerages. The Nifty 50 has risen about 12% from March through May, largely due to better-than-expected corporate earnings and easing global trade risks. That is nearly double the 6.6% gain in the MSCI Emerging Markets index in that time. Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) pumped $2.66 billion into Indian equities over that period and cut their short positions on the Nifty. A short seller borrows stock at a higher price betting its value will decline, at which point they buy the stock and pocket the profit. However, FPIs have started the June derivatives series – which runs from May 30 to June 25 – with about $2 billion in Nifty index futures shorts, the highest since February, according to Nuvama Alternative and Quantitative Research. In contrast, retail investors and high-net-worth individuals (HNIs), called the client category, turned bullish with long positions worth $1.54 billion on Nifty futures, compared with $546 million in shorts from early May. Indian benchmarks end May with gains as investors wait for growth data 'This divergence sets up a potential tug-of-war between institutional caution and retail optimism, and could lead to a brief pause in the market rally in June,' said Abhilash Pagaria, head of Nuvama. Indeed, the Nifty's gains have weakened in each month – from 6.3% in March to 3.5% in April and to about 2% in May. 'Markets appear to be waiting for some concrete cues before turning bullish,' said Sriram Velayudhan, VP at IIFL Securities. Velayudhan expects the Nifty 50 to trade between 24,300 and 25,300 points over the June series, compared with its current level of about 24,800 points. Analysts expect the Nifty to hit new highs by end-2025, but say a correction is likely in the next three months, according to a Reuters poll.


Time of India
30-05-2025
- Business
- Time of India
Foreign investors grow wary of Indian stock market rally
Foreign investors are becoming more cautious about the Indian stock market, indicating a three-month rally may run out of legs despite retail traders growing optimistic, according to monthly derivatives data analysed by two brokerages. The Nifty 50 has risen about 12% from March through May, largely due to better-than-expected corporate earnings and easing global trade risks. That is nearly double the 6.6% gain in the MSCI Emerging Markets index in that time. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like "봉자인터넷"이 105만원을 드립니다 봉자인터넷 더 알아보기 Undo Foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) pumped $2.66 billion into Indian equities over that period and cut their short positions on the Nifty. A short seller borrows stock at a higher price betting its value will decline, at which point they buy the stock and pocket the profit. However, FPIs have started the June derivatives series -- which runs from May 30 to June 25 -- with about $2 billion in Nifty index futures shorts, the highest since February, according to Nuvama Alternative and Quantitative Research. In contrast, retail investors and high-net-worth individuals (HNIs), called the client category, turned bullish with long positions worth $1.54 billion on Nifty futures, compared with $546 million in shorts from early May. Live Events "This divergence sets up a potential tug-of-war between institutional caution and retail optimism, and could lead to a brief pause in the market rally in June," said Abhilash Pagaria, head of Nuvama. Indeed, the Nifty's gains have weakened in each month -- from 6.3% in March to 3.5% in April and to about 2% in May. "Markets appear to be waiting for some concrete cues before turning bullish," said Sriram Velayudhan, VP at IIFL Securities . Velayudhan expects the Nifty 50 to trade between 24,300 and 25,300 points over the June series, compared with its current level of about 24,800 points. Analysts expect the Nifty to hit new highs by end-2025, but say a correction is likely in the next three months, according to a Reuters poll.


Time of India
27-05-2025
- Business
- Time of India
Eternal shares drop 4.5% on foreign shareholding cap
Mumbai: Shares of Eternal , formerly Zomato , fell 4.5% as the company's decision to cap its foreign shareholding at 49.5% could lead to selling by overseas passive funds. According to Nuvama Alternative & Quantitative Research, the decision could lead to drop in the stock's weightage on benchmarks of global index providers MSCI and FTSE, resulting in outflows in the range of $820 million to $1.3 billion over the next few days. Changes in stock weights in indices of MSCI and FTSE result in passive flows because trillions of dollars in global funds track their benchmarks. When a stock is added or removed or if its weights are increased or decreased, index-linked ETFs and mutual funds are forced to buy or sell to mirror the index composition. Nuvama said the reduction of weights on MSCI Standard, likely on May 30, could lead to outflows of $520 million from its index. The cut in the stock's weight to half on FTSE Emerging Market Index, likely on May 27, could result in $300 million worth of selling, said Abhilash Pagaria, Head of Alternative & Quantitative Research at Nuvama Wealth. Eternal secured 99% shareholder votes in favour of a proposal to convert itself into an Indian Owned & Controlled Company (IOCC), according to Jefferies in a recent note. This change would provide flexibility to run a 1P or first party inventory model for subsidiary Blinkit, it said. This will allow the e-commerce firm to buy and hold inventory before selling them. The government has put restrictions on foreign companies operating the 1P model. Nuvama said if the stock comes under pressure, a strong tactical entry zone is around ₹215-220. Eternal shares closed at ₹226.65 on Monday.