
Investors line up four block deals worth ₹3,480 crore on 4 June
Institutional investors have lined up four block deals worth nearly ₹ 3,500 crore on June 4, according to term sheets, as they look to take advantage of the rebound in the Indian equity market.
The investors plan to sell stakes in Indegene Ltd, Tata Technologies Ltd, Alkem Laboratories Ltd and Aditya Birla Fashions Ltd, the terms reviewed by Mint show.
Jayanti Sinha, part of the promoter group, is looking sell 2.9% stake in Alkem Laboratories ( ₹ 825 crore); CA Dawn Investments, vehicle for global PE firm Carlyle, is offloading 10.2% in Indegene ( ₹ 1,420 crore); TPG Rise is exiting its entire 2% in Tata Technologies ( ₹ 635 crore); and Flipkart is selling around 6% stake in Aditya Birla Fashion and Retail ( ₹ 600 crore), according to the terms. The deals are likely to be completed on 4 June 4.
'The sellers want to take advantage of the market conditions and, given the depth of the equity markets, they are confident of finding buyers,' said an investment banker involved in one of these deals.
While Axis Capital is advising Sinha, Bank of America is advising TPG. Goldman Sachs is helping Flipkart and Kotak Securities and IIFL is advising Carlyle on the sale, the term sheets show.
After a brief lull in the market towards the beginning of the year, investors and bankers are now seeing green shoots of activity in the equity capital markets. Ather Energy became the first company to exploit a window earlier this financial year to list on the exchanges. In just the first 15 days of May, investors executed 12 block deals worth ₹ 3,541.97 crore compared with only five deals aggregating ₹ 506.37 crore in April, Mint reported previously, citing data from Prime Database.
The broader Nifty 50 closed 174 points or 0.7% lower at 24,542.50 points on Tuesday. But the benchmark index has rebounded 12.86% from its last low of 21,744 on 7 April this year.
'This (block deals) has been on account of a rebound in market sentiment and geopolitical de-escalation and supported by close to $3 billion in FII (foreign institutional investor) net inflows this quarter, along with steady DII (domestic institutional investors) participation, signaling renewed investor confidence," Gaurav Sood, managing director and head, equity capital markets at Avendus Capital, an investment banking firm, was quoted in the report.
Some of the marquee block deals in May included Antfin selling 4% stake in Paytm; General Atlantic divesting 6.9% in KFin Technologies, and Singapore Telecommunications Ltd offloading 1% stake to Bharti Airtel.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
28 minutes ago
- Business Standard
DGCA launches comprehensive special audit plan to end siloed safety checks
The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has rolled out a new 'comprehensive special audit' framework for India's aviation sector that aims to move beyond siloed safety assessments and carry out integrated evaluations across airlines, airports, maintenance firms, training institutes, and ground handling agencies. 'Traditionally, regulatory and safety oversight functions within Indian aviation have been conducted in silos, with different directorates (of DGCA) performing inspections and audits specific to their respective domains. These activities include planned/unplanned surveillance inspections, random spot checks and ramp inspections, which primarily assess compliance and safety within individual aviation segments,' the regulator stated. On June 12, Air India's London-bound AI171 flight crashed shortly after take-off from Ahmedabad, killing 229 passengers, 12 crew members, and 34 people on the ground. Issued on June 19, the DGCA circular mentioned the need for 'a 360-degree evaluation of the aviation ecosystem, reflecting both its strengths and areas needing improvement'. Going beyond the annual surveillance audits currently in place, the special audits will be carried out by multidisciplinary teams led by senior officials from the regulator. These teams will include personnel from various DGCA divisions—such as flight standards, air safety, airworthiness, aerodrome standards, and air navigation—and may also bring in external experts when needed. The audits will examine three broad areas: the effectiveness of an organisation's Safety Management System (SMS), the robustness of its operational practices, and compliance with regulatory provisions. Each audit will involve a combination of techniques, including on-site inspections, document reviews, interviews with operational staff, safety data analysis, and training record checks. 'These audits will be over and above the Regulatory Audits carried out as per the Annual Surveillance Programme,' the DGCA said. They will apply to all major players in the civil aviation system, including not just airlines and airports but also Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul (MRO) providers, training academies, and even entities that manage emergency response systems and supply chains. The regulator will initiate these audits either routinely—such as through annual assessments or post-implementation reviews—or in response to specific triggers like serious incidents, regulatory violations, or findings by UN body International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO). In urgent cases, audits may begin without notice. Otherwise, entities will be given between three to fourteen working days to prepare. Audit findings will be categorised by severity. The most critical will require corrective action within seven days, while others may be resolved over 30 or 90 days. 'Audited entities must submit a Corrective Action Plan… detailing root cause analysis, remedial actions, preventive measures, implementation timelines, and success metrics,' the circular stated. The DGCA has also made it clear that enforcement will follow in cases where findings are not addressed. 'Non-compliance… may result in progressive enforcement actions, including advisory guidance, formal warnings, operational restrictions, financial penalty, suspension, or revocation of licences,' it noted. To encourage transparency, the regulator has promised confidentiality of audit findings in line with international norms. 'The Special Audit upholds a confidential approach, aligned with ICAO Annex 19 principles, to foster open reporting and positive safety culture,' it said. The new audits, DGCA said, will 'provide a holistic evaluation of the aviation sector, meticulously examining safety, operational efficiency, and regulatory compliance'. The goal is to proactively identify systemic vulnerabilities, enhance resilience, and ensure alignment with international standards and India's own aviation safety objectives.
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
28 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Markets may dip as US strikes on Iran stoke oil fears, global volatility
Indian markets may open lower on Monday due to fears of crude oil disruption from the West Asia though domestic institutional investors may support valuations Sundar Sethuraman Mumbai Listen to This Article Investors may have to brace for a spike in volatility on Monday following the US military's direct involvement in the Israel–Iran conflict over the weekend. Experts believe benchmark Sensex and Nifty may correct 1–1.5 per cent if oil prices surge and Asian markets fall due to the widening of the West Asia conflict. However, domestic institutional investor (DII) buying could cushion the fall. Last week, the domestic markets had gained over 1.5 per cent even as hostilities between Iran and Israel escalated. On Saturday, President Donald Trump announced targeted strikes on three of Iran's key nuclear facilities—Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan—using


Mint
34 minutes ago
- Mint
Vivek Oberoi's Net Worth: Bollywood actor credits early stock market exposure for building ₹1,200 crore fortune
Actor Vivek Oberoi, whose acting career didn't went well, has turned himself into a successful businessman by creating a ₹ 1,200 crore biz empire. During a recent interview on Owais Andrabi's Dubai Property Insider podcast, Vivek revealed that his father only played the role of a mentor in his life and never helped him financially. Vivek, son of actor and politician Suresh Oberoi, made his Bollywood debut in 2002 with Ram Gopal Verma's film 'Company', and became a household name with movie 'Saathiya' (2002), directed by Shaad Ali. Talking about how he built such a big empire, Vivek said that his father groomed him regarding economics and business from a very young age. 'He would bring me a product and would ask me to create an entire business plan about how I was going to sell it. I started understanding the nuances of business from the age of 10 because I was going from door to door to sell that stuff.' Vivek further said that his father used to tell him 'I am a rich man; you are not. You will get there, but you have to do it on your own.' He also credited his exposure to the stock market trading and real estate investments during his teenage years for shaping up his entrepreneurial journey. He said: 'I was able to raise $3 million for my first company, and I was only 19, and I made a lot of money for my investors and myself, and I sold the company by the time I was 23. If I hadn't been applying myself for all those years, it never would have been possible. Because I put in that work, now I have been able to take nine companies public on the Indian stock market, and I am planning to take four more.' As of April 2025 Vivek Oberoi has a net worth of ₹ 1200 crore, according to Forbes India. His ventures include BNW Real Estate Developers, a prominent player in the UAE luxury market, and Solitario, a lab-grown diamond brand. Other business ventures in which Vivek has invested include global brand accelerator Impresario Global, a gin brand called Rutland Square Spirits, and vehicle care platform ReadyAssist.