IOB plans ₹5,000 cr equity raise, diluting existing holders by 7.7%
The PSU lender also approved ₹1,000 cr in Tier II bonds. The combined capital plan exceeds 5% of market cap, making it a material event.
What's new
- IOB board approves up to ₹5,000 cr in fresh equity via FPO/rights/QIP/preferential.
- Also approves ₹1,000 cr in Tier II bonds and accounting adjustment to improve book value.
- The capital raise crosses 5% market-cap threshold, making it a material event.
Why it matters
For a large PSU bank, a ₹5,000 cr equity raise is a significant dilution. While it strengthens the balance sheet, existing shareholders face near-term pressure. The move signals growth ambitions but at the cost of earnings per share.
What we're watching
- Mode of raising (rights vs QIP) — retail participation vs institutional.
- Pricing and timeline of the capital infusion.
- Any government follow-on offer if through FPO.
The full read
Indian Overseas Bank is raising ₹5,000 crore in equity capital, a 7.7% dilution against its ₹65,087 crore market cap. The board approved multiple routes — FPO, rights, QIP, or preferential — alongside ₹1,000 crore in Tier II bonds. The bank also plans to appropriate accumulated losses from share premium, a book-value improving move. For a PSU lender, this scale of fundraising is aggressive and suggests a growth push. But the near-term impact is dilution: existing holders will see their stake shrink unless they participate. The materiality threshold is crossed, making this a boardroom decision that directly affects shareholder value.