FPO Decoded: Everything You Need to Know About Follow-on Public Offerings

Brokerage Free Team •July 29, 2025 | 4 min read • 196 views

📌 Introduction: Why FPOs Matter in the Modern Market

A Follow-on Public Offering (FPO) is a strategic financial tool that allows publicly listed companies to raise capital after their Initial Public Offering (IPO). While IPOs often make headlines, FPOs are quietly powering expansion, reducing corporate debt, and offering investors new opportunities in already listed companies.

This article explores the types, process, regulatory framework, risks, and real-world examples of FPOs, with visual explanations and a practical checklist for investors.

🧠 What is a Follow-on Public Offering (FPO)?

An FPO is when a listed company issues additional shares to raise fresh capital. Unlike IPOs — which are the first sale of shares to the public — FPOs come after a company is already listed. They help fuel growth, reduce debt, or allow promoters to partially exit.

🔍 Types of FPOs: What’s Under the Hood?

✅ 1. Dilutive FPO

In this type, the company issues new shares, increasing the total share count. While this brings in new capital, it also dilutes the earnings per share (EPS) for existing shareholders.

Example: YES Bank's ₹15,000 crore FPO in 2020 aimed at recapitalizing the bank.

✅ 2. Non-Dilutive FPO

Here, existing shareholders sell their stake without new share creation. There is no dilution, and the company doesn’t receive any capital. Common when promoters reduce their stake to meet SEBI’s minimum 25% public shareholding rule.

Example: Government divestments in PSUs like Coal India through OFS (a form of non-dilutive FPO).

🔄 How Does an FPO Work?

🧭 Step-by-Step Process

  1. Board Approval

  2. Appointing Merchant Bankers and Legal Advisors

  3. Drafting the Letter of Offer (LoO)

  4. SEBI Review and Compliance Checks

  5. Marketing (Roadshows, Analyst Calls)

  6. Bidding and Pricing (Fixed or Book-Built)

  7. Share Allotment and Listing

📊 IPO vs FPO: Understanding the Key Differences

Feature Initial Public Offering (IPO) Follow-on Public Offering (FPO)
Purpose First-time fundraising Additional capital or share sale
Company Type Unlisted Already listed
Risk for Investors High (new entity) Lower (known performance)
Dilution Risk Yes Varies (based on type)
Valuation Basis Projected growth Historical performance

💡 Myth vs Reality: Common FPO Misconceptions

💭 Myth Reality
FPOs are for struggling companies Many use them for expansion or debt reduction
All FPOs dilute existing shareholders Only dilutive FPOs do; non-dilutive don’t
FPOs are always cheap Not always — pricing depends on investor appetite and value

🌐 Global and Indian Examples

  • YES Bank FPO (2020): Raised ₹15,000 crore at ₹12/share. Crucial for recapitalization post-crisis.

  • Tesla (Multiple FPOs): Raised billions to fund factories and R&D before becoming consistently profitable

📋 Investor FPO Checklist: How to Evaluate an FPO

Before investing, always evaluate the following:

Criteria What to Check
Use of Proceeds Growth vs. debt servicing vs. promoter exit
Pricing Is there a discount to market price?
Promoter Intent Are they diluting stake for compliance or signaling weakness?
Dilution Impact EPS and ownership changes
Subscription Details QIB and retail demand in the FPO

⚖️ Regulatory Framework: What SEBI Says About FPOs

In India, FPOs are regulated by SEBI’s ICDR (Issue of Capital and Disclosure Requirements) Regulations. Key mandates include:

  • Minimum 25% public shareholding

  • Mandatory disclosures (risk factors, financials, dilution)

  • Lock-in periods for certain categories

  • Transparent pricing and bidding mechanisms

💬 Why Do Companies Opt for FPOs?

🎯 Strategic Reasons:

  • Raise funds for new projects or expansion

  • Pay off existing debt and improve leverage ratios

  • Comply with SEBI’s public shareholding norms

  • Provide liquidity to early investors or promoters

📉 Risks and Challenges of FPOs

  • Dilution of existing shareholder value in case of new issuance

  • Market timing risks — bearish markets may result in undersubscription

  • Reputational signals — excessive or frequent FPOs might indicate financial instability

  • Volatility — if the FPO is perceived as overvalued or unnecessary

🧠 Final Thoughts: Should You Invest in an FPO?

FPOs present a relatively lower-risk, more transparent opportunity compared to IPOs. However, investors must go beyond headlines and analyze intent, pricing, dilution, and financial health.

When executed strategically, FPOs can be a win-win — helping companies grow while giving investors entry into established firms at attractive prices.

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