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‘Day Light Heist’: IPO-Bound OYO Draws Criticism Over Controversial Bonus Share Ballot

‘Day Light Heist’: IPO-Bound OYO Draws Criticism Over Controversial Bonus Share Ballot
OYO plans to file its Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) in November, eyeing a $7-8 billion valuation for its IPO. (Photo source: Company)
  • Fintech founder Mohit Garg accused OYO of short-changing retail investors via postal ballot
  • OYO's postal ballot included bonus CCPS favoring insiders, with only three days for response
  • Class A CCPS convert to 1 share per 6,000 shares, Class B offers 1,109 shares if IPO bankers appointed
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A fintech founder has raised concerns about a potential “daylight heist” by hospitality chain OYO Rooms, alleging that retail investors are being “short-changed” by the company's promoters. 

In a post on X on Friday, financial expert Mohit Garg said that on Oct. 27, OYO sent out a postal ballot with three proposals: increasing authorised capital, issuing bonus CCPS (Compulsorily Convertible Preference Shares), and granting sweat equity. 

“Normally, whenever you are a retail shareholder, you would tend to ignore such postal ballots & emails from companies. Which is exactly the intention of this one - that one ignores the mail and does not take action upon it,” the post alleged.

The controversial point about OYO's postal ballot is the bonus CCPS issue. According to the X post, investors had only three days to respond and the CCPS are structured to favour insiders. 

“Class A (Default):  1 CCPS → 1 share. (if you do nothing, ignore or miss the mail - you get 1 CCPS, which eventually converts to 1 equity share for every 6,000 shares). Class B (Opt-in):

If they are able to appoint "Merchant Bankers for IPO in this FY 25-26" → 1 CCPS → 1,109 shares. (So, one gets an additional 1109 bonus shares for every 6000 equity shares held now),” Garg's post explained.

He added that most retail shareholders end up with Class A shares, gaining little. On the other hand, promoters and large investors who opt for Class B could get a huge bonus if Merchant Bankers are appointed for a future IPO.

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