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SKS Microfinance Ltd IPO Message Board (Page 58)

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178. Selva |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 6:14:06 PM
According to street estimate, the company would price its share offer in the range of Rs 650-700 a share. When asked about the likely price band, Gurmani said, "it would be somewhere around the price at which the company founder sold shares in February."

Earlier this year, SKS Microfinance founder-chairman sold his stake in the company to some private equity funds at the rate of Rs 636 a share.

He said a host of anchor investors have shown interest in the IPO and the company is also considering a discount for attracting retail investors

Sources: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/markets/ipos/SKS-Microfinance-to-double-headcount-to-42K-IPO-opens-Jul-28/articleshow/6201702.cms
177. mr.india |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 3:50:11 PM
price band me sub public apna apna idea lagati hai.company wale ye side pe sab ka idea le ke price band fix karega
176. ANURADHA |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 3:40:58 PM
ye to nayee company hai.....

use to issue ke form print karte waqt PRICE BAND fix kar lena chahiye



ye FPO to nahi. jo SHARE BAZZAR ka MAHOL dekh ke PRICE FIX kare
175. s.s |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 3:38:44 PM
very good ipo after long time.
174. VARSA |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 3:31:00 PM
HI ANURADHA ANY NEWS ABOUT SKS MICROFINANANCE IPO
173. VARSA |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 2:17:06 PM
ANY INF. ABOUT ISSUE
172. HARESH |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 2:10:27 PM
WHAT IS THE PRICE BANDP
171. GAURAV ARYA |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 1:03:10 PM
SKS APP RATE 1650
CONTACT 9896090033
170. ANURADHA |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 12:42:27 PM
PRINCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE.
DUBBLE MINING?
AAJ KE BAD APNI DOSTI CUT.....CUT....CUT... BYE BYE.
169. mr.india |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 12:35:52 PM
CHITTORGARH WALE SIR JI,

YE COMPANY KA R.H.P.ADD KARE.
168. GREY MARKET |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 12:33:15 PM
MIDFIELD------------price band 127-133-----GMP.....20=25
SKS MICROFINANCE ---price band 650-700......GMP....50=60
PRAKASH STEELAGE----price band 100-110.......GMP....8=10
EIL..............ALL DETAIL VERY SOON IN MY BLOG........
167. gem ipo finder |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 11:24:10 AM
rajat

as far as i know about the concurrent india, earlier it was a software co now changed to infra co but most of the revenue comes from agri business like garlic, pickle etc and the revenue is very small.
shed some more light on the investores and all inf u know about the co.
166. sreedhar |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 10:55:12 AM
SahranpuriJi,
So what is the breakup of your applications for SKS & EIL.All my applications will be for only EIL.
165. rajat |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 10:21:33 AM
long bull run concurrent infra (531261).karnataka tourisum minister gali.janardhanreddy company.4 years target 1000/-.he property maximum 50,000cr.4 years after schene of arregment mining,logisticks,agri,power free shares 1+1.ex 100 shars 4 years after 500 shares unlock value,pick a dimond.long bull run......
164. milinds |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 9:56:04 AM
Thank you Mr.Saharanpuriji,
thanks a ton, for lot of information on this IPO
163. Saharanpuri |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 1:35:48 AM
SKS MICROFINANCE INVEST SAYS BUSINESSLINE

Investors with a high risk appetite can consider subscribing to the Initial Public Offer (IPO) of SKS Microfinance, one of the largest microfinance NBFCs in India.

Presence in the under-penetrated micro-financing segment offers immense growth potential. The company has over 2,000 branches across 19 States, a more diversified presence than any other microfinance institution (MFI) in India and is better equipped to leverage future growth opportunities.

Investors may consider this IPO at Rs 724 per share or below. At this price the company may realise Rs 1,260 crore from this IPO.

At a price-book value of 3.5 times post-offer, the stock would trade at Rs 724. The PE ratio at this price would be 26 times. Over the last 15 months, the company has raised funds from private equity investors at Rs 300/share.

SKS Microfinance has a high capital adequacy ratio (of 28.3 per cent which may further improve to excess of 40 per cent post-offer) and strong risk-management systems which address two concerns MFI are facing today — access to capital and maintenance of asset quality.

The net non-performing asset ratio as of March 31, 2010, was 0.16 per cent. SKS' conservative provisioning on standard assets and high NPA provisioning reduces the inherently high credit risks in this business, to some extent.

Innovative Business Model

SKS' loans are disbursed only to women, primarily for income-generating activities due to which the credit risk is low. SKS adopts a Joint Liability Group (JLG) approach to lending, with each group consisting of five members giving mutual guarantee to each other. Each centre has around 5-7 JLGs, which again guarantees the combined loans mutually.

SKS has a diversified sector and geographic profile. The sector-wise disbursements as of March 31 2010, saw trade (includes small retailers) dominate with 29 per cent of the total outstandings, followed by livestock (26 per cent) and services (20 per cent).

Most of the portfolio comes under ‘priority lending' norms of the RBI, enabling the sale of this portfolio to other mainstream lending institutions; this also reduces funding costs for SKS to that extent. SKS has geographically diversified its lending portfolio, with Andhra Pradesh contributing only 29 per cent, compared to 100 per cent in 2005.

Demand-supply gap

A CRISIL report on MFIs in September 2009 estimated an addressable market of Rs 1,20,000 crore for microfinance.

A report put out by Sa-Dhan, an association of MFIs, suggests that total credit disbursed by way of microfinance was Rs 35,000 crore in 2009. These data show the potential this sector holds and why strong growth may continue over the next 3-4 years.

Financials

SKS' gross loan portfolio and net profits has grown nearly eleven-fold with profits expanding by 23 times over a five-year period ending March 2010. A flat rate of 12.5-15 per cent a year plus a 1 per cent processing fee (translating into a compounded rate of 25-28 per cent) is charged on these loans.

While the yields are high, so are operating costs. Operating costs are higher than interest costs and are likely to remain so. However, SKS' cost-income ratio fell to 52 per cent for 2009-10 from 62 per cent the preceding year and may show moderation with the company scaling up.

The interest spread stood at an exceptional 12 per cent for 2009-10, thanks to its high yields. Return on assets too is high at 4.3 per cent and may further improve as the operating costs moderate. The borrowing profile of SKS, like other institutions, is skewed towards banks.

However, it has supplemented bank funds with market issuances, in addition to securitisation of its loans. It can further tap this mode given its investment-grade ratings.

SKS' average loan size is small, but is trending up as it expands repeat customers. Further, there is scope for margin expansion as SKS leverages its branch network to cross-sell products such as insurance and mobile phones which contribute directly to the bottom-line.

SKS has also set up Sangam stores which enable small retailers to access interest-free working capital loans and products from wholesalers, which SKS' own network distributes. For this, SKS receives a 2.3 per cent commission from the wholesaler. This project is yet to be implemented outside Andhra Pradesh.

Revenues may get a further boost from its intent to extend housing loans to loyal customers. While the effective rate is attractive at 21 per cent, the secured nature and higher equity for such loans may reduce credit risk while maintaining high returns.

The Risks

In spite of trying to match the asset-liability profile, SKS lends at a fixed rate, with increases in cost of funds not passed on. Over-leveraging by the borrowers is a key risk, as there have been instances where borrowers accessed funds from multiple lenders. To discourage members approaching several MFIs simultaneously, the ‘Micro Finance Institution Network', a group of MFI-NBFCs, is planning to set up a database of borrowers to ensure that the borrowing limit doesn't cross Rs 50,000 per borrower. Another concern is the seasonality of the earnings, which are back-ended to the second half of the year. Given that the MFI loans are to low income groups, during natural calamities, the loan portfolios may result in NPAs due to the inability of the borrower to pay.

However, according to the management, recovery does tend to pick up once a moratorium period is extended. Retaining a skilled workforce is a challenge (SKS has attrition rates upwards of 25 per cent), which may expand the already high operating costs, given substantial costs involved in training employees.

162. Saharanpuri |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 1:32:27 AM
I have been watching the evolution of Banco Compartamos in Mexico, their leading microfinance firm and among the first worldwide to do an IPO which resulted in great wealth for some of the founders. It is fair to say that several sections of Mexican society are uneasy about the distribution of gains from Compartamos’ microfinance efforts, even though I believe that overall good has been crated. All this is ironic given that Compartamos comes from the root meaning ‘to share.’

SKS should learn from Compartamos’ experience. Stepping away from the rhetoric and sometimes passionate debate, is there a sense in which idealistic people would stay away from SKS in the future? Academic economists, using data from the United States and France, have demonstrated that there is evidence of ‘sorting’ in the labor market. (American) football players tend to be large, musicians tend not to be tone-deaf. Extroverted individuals tend to gravitate to jobs that allow them much interaction with their co-workers, and much customer interaction. This should not be surprising, but it is reassuring to find statistical confirmatory evidence. What does this mean for altruism in the SKS workplace, as the company goes through an IPO? I believe SKS’ ongoing success depends on maintaining a continually reexamined balance between profit-making and altruism, and that this is something to which we must continue to pay attention during the transition to being a public company.
161. Saharanpuri |   Link |  Bookmark | July 25, 2010 1:15:15 AM

SKS Microfinance IPO – Financial Info and Annual Report

in MFI's in India

SKS Micro Finance earned a profit before tax of Rs 267.70 crore on its total income of Rs 958.92cr for the FY 2010.The basic Earnings Per Share(EPS) of the company is Rs 33 as per the financial information provided by it.

India’s central bank, the Reserve Bank of India, specifies that non-deposit-taking NBFCs have to have a Capital adequacy Ratio of 12%. SKS maintains a healthy Capital adequacy Ratio of 24.8%. Ever since it transformed into a for-profit NBFC in 2005, SKS has established a reputation for raising equity and debt to keep pace with its ambitious growth plans. It has set new standards for the sector repeatedly on the amount of equity and debt raised. It has also been instrumental in introducing mainstream financial instruments into microfinance sector.

While funding its growth, SKS has given top priority to maintaining the highest standards in financial transparency. It recently converted from a Private limited Company in order to comply with even more stringent accounting standards. It has won the CGAP award for Financial transparency thrice – in 2004, 2005 and again in 2006. Apart from financial audit conducted by external agencies, SKS also has a strong internal audit team of over 350 members who monitor operations on an on-going basis.

160. MN |   Link |  Bookmark | July 24, 2010 9:30:50 PM
CURRENT GMP OF SKS MICRO..62..
159. RAMA |   Link |  Bookmark | July 24, 2010 8:39:57 PM
NEXT IPO Prakash Steelage Limited (PSL)
PRICE BAND 100-110
OPENING DATE 05.08.10 TO 10.08.10