Check Gopal Snacks IPO subscription status here. The subscription figures are taken from BSE and NSE and are updated at regular interval.
The public issue has QIB, NII, and Retail categories for subscription. In addition, there are shares reserved for employees and the company is giving nearly 10% discount to its employees. Here you can find Gopal Snacks IPO subscription status segregated by days and investor categories.
Gopal Snacks IPO Subscription Status – Live Updates
Category | QIB | NII | Retail | Employee | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shares Offered | 3,393,700 | 2,545,276 | 5,938,977 | 102,040 | 11,979,993 |
11 Mar 2024 | 17.50 | 9.50 | 4.01 | 6.87 | 9.02 |
7 Mar 2024 | 0.09 | 1.63 | 2.01 | 3.22 | 1.40 |
6 Mar 2024 | 0.00 | 0.51 | 0.96 | 1.78 | 0.60 |
Shares allotted to anchor investors are not included in these calculations. Similarly, shares allotted to market maker, if any, are not part of these calculations.
Investor Categories in Gopal Snacks IPO Subscription
The three most important categories of IPO investors defined by SEBI are part of Gopal Snacks IPO. As mentioned above, there is an addition of Employee category.
Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIB) – Examples of QIBs are Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs), Scheduled Commercial Banks, Mutual Funds, Venture Capital Funds, Foreign Venture Capital Investors (FVCIs), Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs), Insurance Companies, Provident Funds and Pension Funds with a minimum corpus of INR 250 million.
Generally, 50% of the offer is reserved for QIBs. Some of these are classified as anchor investors which work towards stabilizing an IPO.
Non-Institutional Investor (NII) – These are affluent investors who can invest more than INR 200,000. In other words, these are High Networth Individuals (HNIs). Generally, 15% of the offer is reserved for this category. Bids in the category need to exceed INR 200,000. Typical examples include Category III FPIs, resident Indian individuals, HUFs (in the name of Karta), companies, corporate bodies, eligible NRIs, scientific institutions, societies and trusts.
NII category is further divided into two big and small, the threshold application amount being INR 1,000,000 (INR 10 lakh).
Retail Individual Investor (RII) – This category is purely meant for small investors, whose bid must not exceed INR 200,000 per person. Usually, 35% of total shares are reserved for this category in case of the company with profitable operations. In the event of the IPO-bound company not fulfilling this criterion, only 10% shares are reserved for retail investors.Â
Employee – Shares reserved for company employees are not part of the Net Offer and there may additionally be a discount on offer price to encourage employees to subscribe. Investors in employee category may also apply under retail category in an IPO. Therefore, this category of IPO investors has a unique advantage.