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Zomato Crosses INR 1 Lakh Cr In Market Capitalisation On First Day Of Listing

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SUMMARY

Zomato founder and CEO tweeted soon after saying: “A lot of people are calling this a ‘historical moment’.  It is not"

The company listed on the bourses at INR 120 a share, which is a nearly 53% premium over the issue price of INR 79 per share

Overall, the INR 9,375 Cr Zomato IPO received 2,751.27 Cr bids for a total issue size of 71.92 Cr equity shares, according to data from the National Stock Exchange (NSE).

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Gurugram-based foodtech startup Zomato listed on the bourses on Friday (July 23) at INR 120, a nearly 53% premium over the issue price of INR 76 per share. While the food delivery major’s stock has hovered around the INR 125 mark till a few hours after the listing, it touched a high of INR 138 briefly and powered the company’s market capitalisation to over INR 1 Lakh Cr.

Zomato founder and CEO tweeted soon after saying: “A lot of people are calling this a ‘historical moment’.  It is not. History is always made in hindsight. Never in the present. Back to work.”nMeanwhile, stock market investors and stakeholders in the startup ecosystem bursted with enthusiasm on social media. 

“Congratulations and very well done team Zomato and Deepinder. Great things take time to build. Thank you for making us look like smart investors,” tweeted Sanjeev Bikhchandani, founder of InfoEdge and one of the earliest VC backers of the food delivery firm.

However, Professor Aswath Damodaran, a finance professor at New York University who is popularly referred to as the ‘Wall Street’s dean of valuation’ sounded a word of caution with a blog post published in lead up to the Zomato listing.

According to Damodaran’s calculation, even assuming that Zomato will be the market leader in India’s food delivery sector with 40% market share, the company’s stock price should not be worth more than INR 41. 

“The assumption that will make or break Zomato as a company, since so much of the potential in the company is dependent on how the food delivery/restaurant market in India evolves over the next decade… Even allowing for robust growth in India and improved digital access, I find it hard to see the total market exceeding $40 Bn, with $25 Bn (at present) , in ten years, being a more likely outcome,” he added. 

Other veteran watchers of the stock market have also been flummoxed by the high revenue-valuation asymmetry of Zomato. For instance, ace investor Rakesh Jhunjunwala said in an interaction with fellow market veteran, Raamdeo Agrawal, Chairman, Motilal Oswal AMC:  “It is not my party, I do not go there. This party will get spooked at some stage,” he added. Talking about the recently concluded IPO of food-tech unicorn Zomato, the big bull said that he sees 20% upside but 60% downside potential for the company. “This is driven by discounting next 15 years,” he added. 

Zomato’s initial public offering was oversubscribed by 38.96 times on the final day of bidding, data with stock exchanges showed on July 16. 

Overall, the INR 9,375 Cr Zomato IPO received 2,751.27 Cr bids for a total issue size of 71.92 Cr equity shares, according to data from the National Stock Exchange (NSE).

The Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs) portion of Zomato IPO was oversubscribed the most at 51.79 times the size of the offering. Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) led the QIB portion, followed by banks, financial institutions, and mutual funds companies. 

On the other hand, the retail individual investors (RII) portion which consist of 10% of the overall IPO offering was oversubscribed by 7.45 times. 

 

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