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India will reduce the IPO float requirements for large companies to allow Jio to list

MUMBAI - The Indian government approved a reduction in the percentage of shares that large companies seeking to list are required to sell. This has been reduced from 5% to 2.5%.

SEBI chair Tuhin Kanta Pandey stated that the Securities and Exchange Board of India has also agreed to a settlement in principle with the National Stock Exchange to resolve a legal dispute which had delayed?the NSE’s initial public offer.

Last year, the regulator halved minimum IPO floats for large companies. Companies valued at more than?5 trillion (57 billion dollars) could sell only 2.5% of paid-up capital after their listing.

The measure was waiting for a government approval before it could be implemented. Its goal is to?make it easier for the?market to absorb?heavy offerings.

Reliance Jio Platforms, Reliance's telecom division, is looking at a listing in this year. The firm would float 2,5% of its shares and could be India's biggest-ever IPO. It's worth over $4 billion.

The regulator has eased regulations and accelerated clearances on the?second largest market in the world for initial public offering.

Pandey announced on Saturday that regulators will issue the necessary approvals this month for NSE to launch their stock market offering.

Reports on Monday stated that the 'exchange' plans to file draft listing documents by the end of March and is currently in discussion with investment banks and?lawfirms to gauge investor interest.

NSE is the largest derivatives exchange in the world. It has tried to go public for years but due to ongoing legal cases and concerns about governance, it failed to get regulatory approval. Its main rival BSE Ltd. is listed. (Reporting and writing by Jayshree Upadhyay, Urvi Dugar in Mumbai and Nishit Navin in Bengaluru. Editing and proofreading by Nivedita Bhattacharjee, Emelia Sithole Matarise and Nivedita Bhattacharjee)

(source: Reuters)