
Shanti Gold International to debut today; GMP points to mild listing pop
is set to make its
stock market debut
on Friday with market participants eyeing a modest listing premium of 17%, going by the latest grey market premium (GMP) of Rs 34 over the issue price of Rs 199. This puts the estimated listing price around Rs 233 per share.
The Rs 360-crore IPO, entirely a fresh issue, saw strong investor interest, getting subscribed over 80 times overall, led by 151.17x in the HNI segment and 117.33x in QIBs. The retail portion drew a relatively lower but still healthy 29.73x demand.
Explore courses from Top Institutes in
Please select course:
Select a Course Category
Technology
Product Management
Others
MCA
Data Science
Public Policy
PGDM
others
healthcare
Degree
Project Management
Design Thinking
CXO
MBA
Cybersecurity
Finance
Leadership
Data Analytics
Digital Marketing
Operations Management
Data Science
Management
Artificial Intelligence
Healthcare
Skills you'll gain:
Duration:
12 Weeks
MIT xPRO
CERT-MIT XPRO Building AI Prod India
Starts on
undefined
Get Details
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Villas Prices In Dubai Might Be More Affordable Than You Think
Villas In Dubai | Search Ads
Get Quote
Undo
The jewellery manufacturer, known for its 22kt CZ casting gold ornaments and
B2B client base
, plans to deploy the IPO proceeds towards setting up a new facility in Jaipur, funding working capital, and partial debt repayment.
The company operates out of a single facility in Mumbai and caters to over 15 states and one union territory, servicing clients like Joyalukkas and Lalitha Jewellery.
Shanti Gold reported a 56% jump in revenue to Rs 1,112 crore and 108% growth in net profit to Rs 56 crore in FY25, showcasing strong operating momentum.
Live Events
However, at a P/E of 25.69x post issue, analysts caution that the IPO was priced at a premium, given the fragmented and competitive nature of India's gold jewellery market.
The stock will list on BSE and NSE, and investors now await to see whether the secondary market can sustain the enthusiasm shown during bidding, especially in light of the tempered GMP.
(
Disclaimer
: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of the Economic Times)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hans India
8 minutes ago
- Hans India
Elaborate plans to put Vizag on world map
Visakhapatnam: As part of multi-faceted expansion plans to develop the Visakhapatnam Economic Region (VER), under NITI Aayog's Growth Hub initiative that aims at an initial $54 billion economy, the port city is all set to be developed into two broad brownfield cities: Vizag 2.0 and Vizag Bay City, the latter being envisaged as 'Miami of the East'. Towards this end, the Andhra Pradesh government has entrusted the land pooling responsibility to the Visakhapatnam Metropolitan Region Development Authority (VMRDA). VMRDA chairperson MV Pranav Gopal told The Hans India: 'The state government is keen on developing Visakhapatnam in a sustained way. The endeavour aims at planned urban expansion, sustainable revenue generation, and creating a world-class urban identity for Visakhapatnam'. The NITI Aayog, through its Growth Hub endeavour, has been promoting integrated urban development and thematic growth nodes. Under this, it has envisioned Visakhapatnam as a 'Bay City' with potential for eventual growth as 'Miami of the East'. To facilitate these long-term developmental plans, the Government of Andhra Pradesh has issued permission for a land pooling scheme under the VMRDA across Visakhapatnam, Vizianagaram and Anakapalli districts, covering an extent of 1,941.19 acres. The Visakhapatnam Economic Region (VER), will be spread over nine districts - Visakhapatnam, Vizianagaram, Srikakulam, Anakapalli, Kakinada, East Godavari, Konaseema, Alluri Sitarama Raju, and Parvathipuram Manyam, with an estimated 16.5 million population. The target is to employ seven million people. In alignment with the broader Swarna Andhra vision, the VER aspires to grow into a $135 billion economy, while delivering inclusive, sustainable, and high-quality growth over the next seven years. The VMRDA intends to develop Vizag 2.0 over 210 square kilometre and Vizag Bay City over 40 square kilometre. Vizag Metro to provide seamless connectivity Upon completion of phase 1 and 2 of the planned 77- km Metro by 2028-30, there will be seamless connectivity among all parts of the expanded port city, including the proposed IT hubs and the Bhogapuram Airport. For realising the Metro Rail project, developing master plan, building roads, and taking up incidental developmental activities, the authority would be incurring an expenditure of about Rs.4,000 crore to Rs.5,000 crore. Land Pooling is to be undertaken as per the VMRDA Land Pooling Scheme Rules, 2016. The proposal involves identification of prime government and private lands near the national highways from Anakapalli to Bhogapuram. Land pooling under the said rules will enable VMRDA to create a land bank of developed plots. Apart from monetising developed plots to fund major infrastructure projects (e.g., Metro Rail, roads, utilities), the focus is on ensuring cost-effective urban development by avoiding large-scale upfront land acquisition costs. In order to translate Vizag 2.0 and Vizag Bay City plans into reality, the administration will also identify and develop under-utilised government/private lands as well as mobilise resources for urban development and infrastructure.


Economic Times
8 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Indian football's forever mess: ISL crisis risks shattering sport's big dreams
Agencies Indian football's forever mess: ISL crisis risks shattering sport's big dreams Statutory warning: If you love football, don't read this. It will hurt. The story so far: The All India Football Federation (AIFF) and the Football Sports Development Ltd (FSDL), a Reliance-owned company that runs the Indian Super League (ISL), are not seeing eye to eye. They remain poles apart in their renegotiation of the master rights agreement (MRA), which grants the marketing rights of India's toptier league to FSDL. FSDL favours a fundamental rewiring of the agreement, which involves the setting up of a new company—with itself, the clubs and AIFF as shareholders—to run the league. AIFF wants to continue with the current setup where it receives an annual fee of Rs 50 crore from FSDL, with a 5% hike baked in. Negotiations, which began in February, have stalled. What complicates matters is a separate case being heard by the Supreme Court on a new constitution to govern AIFF. For now, the court has directed AIFF not to sign any deal, including a renegotiated MRA. A verdict was expected on July 18, but it has been delayed with the court waiting to see if the National Sports Governance Bill, 2025, would be adopted in this session of Parliament. If it does, then the law, which will form the basis of regulating India's wild west of sports bodies, will be the foundation of a newly constituted AIFF as well. The problem? ISL usually runs from September to April, and with time ticking, Indian football is now a game of inglorious uncertainties. Questions abound. When will the bill pass? When will the SC deliver its verdict? Will a newly constituted AIFF have enough time to negotiate with FSDL on a new MRA? Will they be able to reach an agreement? With most clubs going slow on preparations, citing uncertainty, will players be fit? Will the league start on time? Will all the delays end up with the league being nixed for this season? If the league gets cancelled this year, expect sanctions from the governing body of world football, Fifa, apart from a damaged brand, disappointed fans and an admission that perhaps the strongest attempt yet to breathe life into Indian football has failed. Back in 2014, during the first ISL, there was a glimmer of hope that this was going to be the big break that India, then the world's second most populous nation, would need to spark interest in the world's most popular sport. For one, it was backed by Reliance, one of India's biggest names in business. With the organisational heft of IMG, the global sports marketing agency that had played a key role in setting up the Indian Premier League (IPL) cricket tournament, it was taken for granted that things would be was also a sprinkling of global stars in the first edition—Alessandro Del Piero, Freddie Ljungberg, Robert Pires, David Trezeguet, Joan Capdevila, Luis Garcia and Nicolas Anelka—to attract was interest from corporates as well as movie and sports stars to own the franchises, as they saw it as an opportunity to get early on what could be the next a while, it worked. It was reported that 429 million viewers watched the inaugural edition live on TV, making it the second most watched sport in India after ISL couldn't sustain the momentum. Last year's viewership numbers reportedly dwindled to 130 million which, while outnumbering all other sports save cricket, is not quite the sparkle that was expected from ISL after a decade.A key reason, say club owners, is the quality of football itself. As top global names nearing retirement were phased out, their replacements, as well as Indian players, didn't quite step up as expected. There could be another reason, too. ISL started as a twomonth tournament and then changed to a longer league format. Joy Bhattacharjya, CEO of Prime Volleyball League, believes that Indian audiences prefer a short, twomonth, IPL-esque format to a sevenor eightmonth-long league format followed by ISL. While the current format is in sync with the global norms in football, it may have diluted a sustained audience engagement in India where folks aren't used to longer leagues. Net-net, after 10 years, no one is really making money from their investments.A club CEO told ET on condition of anonymity that each ISL club is losing Rs 30-35 crore annually for the last 11 years: 'Your average ISL club has easily lost about Rs 330-350 crore. I'm not even counting interest costs.'The league's cumulative losses have been variously pegged between Rs 3,000 crore and Rs 5,000 numbers weren't sustainable, and one club, FC Pune City, had to shut shop, while Delhi Dynamos moved to Bhubaneswar, lured by a free stadium and increased are worries for other clubs. As a club executive laments, 'We are in a situation where commercially, the sport is not viable. As the broadcasters cannot see value right now, the return on investment is weak.'What will it take to fix that? A key worry —and a quick fix that clubs suggest—pertain to player salaries. A wage-to-turnover ratio under 60% is considered the best practice globally for football clubs. For ISL, claims a club executive, this figure sometimes crosses 70%. The ISL has a mandatory wage cap of Rs 18 crore, but this is frequently flouted, a club owner says on condition of to the salary conundrum is the lack of quality players coming in. To get even marginally decent players, clubs end up paying a lot, claims a club executive. Player salaries have gone from ' ?20 lakh back in 2010 in the I-League (the former top tier) to Rs 3 crore now. The quality of players and the quality of football have not improved in proportion,' says another club Prabhakaran, executive committee member of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) and former secretary general of AIFF, counters it is market forces at play: 'The pool of talented players is small. At the same time clubs want to win the league by giving the best salaries to the best available players. The clubs are hiking the salaries, nobody has asked them to pay more.'Some clubs want the league to renew its commitment to a wage cap, with far stricter enforcement and oversight on payments made to footballers on the sly as to really fix Indian football, short-term remedies are not enough. To make ISL a more attractive experience for the fan and a more attractive proposition for the advertiser, the quality of football should go up.'You need a steady flow of young talented footballers to make a league sustainable, and that hasn't happened because not enough money is being invested in football structure and youth football,' complains a club executive Bhattacharjya, who was project director of the Fifa Under-17 World Cup in India in 2017, reckons that the administrative set-up for football in India is broken beyond club owners and chief executives ET spoke to squarely blame AIFF which, they allege, is not investing enough in grassroots football, resulting in a pyramid, where money concentrates on the top, with little trickling down. Their question: what has the AIFF been doing with the Rs 50 crore going into its coffers as fees for organising the league?In FY2023, AIFF's income touched Rs 137 crore, which came down to Rs 110 crore in FY2024. Even so, AIFF remains the second richest sports body in Chaubey, president, AIFF, responds: 'Marketing partner FSDL provides fees to AIFF. These funds are utilised by AIFF across various areas, including grassroots and youth development, coach and referee education, development of national teams, and the organisation of national championships across all age groups both for men and women.' He says that last year, 'AIFF successfully conducted 21 championships, featuring a total of 1,697 matches'.Prabhakaran says, 'The budget is 10% of what a country the size of India requires. With the current numbers, you cannot invest in high-quality manpower. You cannot invest in grassroots football, in youth, in infrastructure.'It is a classic chicken-or-egg situation— to improve the financial situation you need to improve viewership, for which you need better football, for which you need better players, for which you need to invest in youth, for which you need said, ISL has been the most successful attempt to put together a national-level football competition—at least from a viewership attempts like the National Football League (NFL) and the I-League had failed to improve Indian football. A league should power the performance of the national team. But strangely enough, India's best-ever Fifa ranking of 94 was in 1996, before NFL. The best since—No. 96— was in 2017. Currently the team is at a dismal 133. This is not how things were supposed to now, everyone is waiting, hoping against hope that things will work out with the passing of the sports law—the prospect of a reconstituted AIFF and a new MRA. If it doesn't, then what will be under threat immediately include the livelihood of hundreds of players, support staff and their families, and indeed the likelihood of a revival of Indian football anytime thing this correspondent, as a football fan, can guarantee is that supporters of Indian football—ignored by all—are angry.


Time of India
13 minutes ago
- Time of India
"If irresponsibility has a face...": Nirmala Sitharaman slams Rahul Gandhi over remarks on Arun Jaitley
New Delhi [India], August 2 (ANI): Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Saturday slammed the Leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha Rahul Gandhi over the remarks he made about the late Union Minister Arun Jaitley and said that such "irresponsible" remarks only hurt the Congress. Finance Minister responded to Rahul Gandhi's remarks, as the latter claimed that Arun Jaitley was sent by the Modi government to "threaten" him for trying to fight against the farm laws . Explore courses from Top Institutes in Please select course: Select a Course Category Finance healthcare Others Product Management Data Science Leadership CXO MCA Management Digital Marketing Project Management Healthcare PGDM Technology Operations Management others Degree Data Analytics Artificial Intelligence Public Policy Design Thinking Data Science MBA Cybersecurity Skills you'll gain: Duration: 9 Months IIM Calcutta SEPO - IIMC CFO India Starts on undefined Get Details Skills you'll gain: Duration: 7 Months S P Jain Institute of Management and Research CERT-SPJIMR Fintech & Blockchain India Starts on undefined Get Details In a post on X, Sitharaman said, "If irresponsibility has a face, it is Rahul Gandhi, Leader of Opposition in LS. To throw baseless allegations at people in public life, even those who are no longer with us, is becoming a personality trait for him. His remarks on the late Shri. Arun Jaitley is despicable. India needs a strong opposition party. An irresponsible leadership hurts his party @INCIndia and the country. But does he care? by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Moose Approaches Girl At Bus Stop In Negros Occidental - Watch What Happens Happy in Shape — nsitharaman (@nsitharaman) Earlier in the day, while addressing the Annual Legal Conclave 2025, Rahul Gandhi, during his speech, claimed that the NDA government had sent the late Minister Arun Jaitley to "threaten" him for trying to fight against the farm laws introduced by the Modi government earlier. Live Events "I remember when I was fighting the farm laws, Arun Jaitley was sent to me to threaten me. He told me, 'If you carry on opposing the government, fighting the farm laws, we will have to act against you. ' I looked at him and said 'I don't think you have an idea who you are talking to,'" Rahul Gandhi said. The Congress leader also launched a scathing attack on the Election Commission of India, and alleged its complicity in the large-scale voter fraud. "I remember when I was fighting the farm laws, Arun Jaitley was sent to me to threaten me. He told me, 'If you carry on opposing the government, fighting the farm laws, we will have to act against you. ' I looked at him and said 'I don't think you have an idea who you are talking to,'" Rahul Gandhi said.