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India's small investor singed in Reliance Power shock

Mon Feb 11, 2008 9:04pm IST
 
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By Hiral Vora

MUMBAI (Reuters) - When Meera Sanghavi was allotted 16 shares of Reliance Power in India's biggest-ever initial public offer, it seemed a windfall for the middle-class housewife, who hoped to double her money in less than a month.

Instead, she sold her shares in panic on Monday as the newly listed stock tanked. She lost 7 percent of her investment and will think twice before applying for shares again.

"This is a big loss for common people like me who had lot of expectations from such a big company," 49-year-old Sanghavi told Reuters.

Reliance Power, which raised $3 billion in the world's largest IPO this year, attracted bids worth $190 billion from over 4 million investors when it opened for subscription in January, just days before stock markets worldwide went into a tailspin.

Shares in billionaire Anil Ambani's Reliance Power plummeted 17 percent by the time the market closed.

"I got scared when the price started going down," Sanghavi said. "Even the name of Reliance did not take the shares up."

Reliance Power has no operating assets and is not likely to report strong profits for five years.

But the extraordinarily high subscription to its IPO demonstrated not only the extent to which middle-class Indians have bought into a stock market bull-run of five years but also their faith in the Ambani family name.  Continued...

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