For the first time in its history, the Nepali stock market has
witnessed Over-The-Counter (OTC) trading with de-listed Nepal Bank Ltd (NBL)’s
shares.
source: The Himalayan Times,11 Oct 2012
Today, the bank’s 71,928 unit shares belonging to the government were
transferred to NBL’s 2,664 employees.
The OTC trading, being an unorganized secondary market, does not
require the involvement of brokers and Nepse only facilitates the transfer.
Though the OTC Regulation 2065 came into existence four years back, so
far no shares had been traded under OTC market. The shares of companies that
have been de-listed by Nepse, shares of small companies that are unable to meet
Nepse’s and Securities Board of Nepal’s requirements, and shares
of banks and financial institutions that have conducted its initial
public offering but have not yet listed at Nepse can be traded over the
counter.
Nepse, so far, has de-listed 43 companies and most of the de-listed
companies are virtually non-existent, as a result of which their shares are
also not in circulation. Nepal Bank, which was de-listed by Nepse in 2004
following the bank’s near insolvency state, is also in the process of getting
its shares re-listed to bring its restructuring to a conclusion.
The bank’s 3.8 million units of shares were listed at Nepse at the
time. Its capital was negative by little more than Rs four billion in the
beginning of the fiscal year.
Nepal Bank has already undertaken a recapitalization plan by issuing
rights shares to existing shareholders at a ratio of 1:9.5.
The government, that owns 41 per cent stake in the bank, will be
purchasing the rights shares worth Rs 1.37 billion from the rights issue that
will be floated in a month.
The bank is looking forward to re-list its shares at the stock
exchange as regulation requires the scrip to be actively traded before it can
come up with the rights issue.
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