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SoftBank-Backed Delhivery Jumps More Than 10% in Mumbai Debut

SoftBank-backed Indian logistics firm Delhivery Ltd. climbed in early trading as investors brushed off rising global risks to support the nation’s second-largest initial public offering of the year in its market debut.

SoftBank-Backed Delhivery Jumps More Than 10% in Mumbai Debut
SoftBank-Backed Delhivery Jumps More Than 10% in Mumbai Debut

SoftBank-backed Indian logistics firm Delhivery Ltd. surged as investors brushed off rising global risks to support the nation’s second-largest initial public offering of the year in its market debut.

The shares climbed over 10% to 536.35 rupees in Mumbai, versus the issue price of 487 rupees. The company and its shareholders, including Carlyle’s CA Swift Investments and SoftBank Vision Fund’s SVF Doorbell, raised 52.35 billion rupees ($675 million) through the sale of both new and secondary shares. Venus Pipes & Tubes Ltd., which also debuted on the exchanges on Tuesday, closed with a gain of 8.7%.

A delhivery courier with the orders in Gurugram.Photographer: Nasir Kachroo/NurPhoto/Getty Images
A delhivery courier with the orders in Gurugram.Photographer: Nasir Kachroo/NurPhoto/Getty Images

The listing day pop contrasts with last week’s debut of state-run insurer LIC, which dropped 7.8% on its first trading day after an IPO that raised $2.7 billion, an Indian record. Delhivery’s positive start may provide encouragement for companies waiting to tap capital markets amid ongoing global volatility. 

Read: Aramco-Style Dividend Is What LIC Investors Seek Post Flop Debut

SoftBank-Backed Delhivery Jumps More Than 10% in Mumbai Debut

Founded in 2011, Delhivery is one of India’s largest fully-integrated logistics companies, serving over 17,000 postal codes with a team of 86,000 people, according to its website.

Its equity sale was oversubscribed 1.63 times, with a pick-up in demand coming on the last day and supported mostly by qualified institutional buyers. Non-institutional investors, retail individuals and employees placed smaller bids than the portions reserved for them.

Like LIC, Delhivery previously cut its offering size and delayed its listing on the back of market volatility. The logistics startup and its shareholders initially had been seeking to raise about $1 billion in a deal that was expected to be priced in March. 

Still, both companies managed to raise significant funds despite the slowdown in IPOs globally. Total proceeds raised in India since January are higher than those in venues such as Hong Kong and London.

Read: Advent Sees Drop in Private Valuations in India After Stock Rout

(Updates closing stock price, Venus Pipes’ performance in second paragraph)

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