The IPO prospectus is an offering document that provides potential investors with details about the company and helps them decide whether or not to invest in the company.
An IPO prospectus is a legal document that introduces the company to the public. The prospectus contains a lot of decision-making information that an investor can use to decide whether or not to invest in the company.
In Indian IPOs, the issuers have to file the DRHP (Draft Red Herring Prospectus) when they apply for the IPO. Once the company receives SEBI/Exchange approval, the issuer files the prospectus or RHP (Red Herring Prospectus). All prospectuses should be drafted or prepared based on SEBI guidelines.
The IPO prospectus is an offering document that provides potential investors with details about the company and helps them decide whether or not to invest in the company.
The IPO prospectus is not an agreement for an initial public offering. It is an invitation to the public to buy the shares. Investors may or may not invest in an IPO based on their analysis. The IPO prospectus is prepared by the lead manager and the issuer which helps investors make an informed decision. It contains all the necessary information about the company including the financials.
There are different types of offer documents based on the stage of the IPO.
DRHP stands for Draft Red Herring Prospectus. The DRHP is also known as a draft offer document.
The DRHP document is the preliminary prospectus that the issuer submits to initiate the IPO process. The DRHP is required to be approved by SEBI/stock exchanges based on where it is a mainboard IPO or SME IPO.
The DRHP contains information on the company overview, IPO structure, details of the offering (new issue or offer for sale), management and promoters, shareholder structure, related risks, use of proceeds, financial statements of the company and other information.
It does not contain detailed information about the size of the offering, the price or the number of shares offered.
The DRHP will be posted on the websites of the issuing company, SEBI, the stock exchanges and merchant bankers for the public to review and provide feedback or comments.
After evaluating the DRHP, the Merchant Banker makes the necessary adjustments and submits the final offer to SEBI, the Registrar of Companies (ROC) and the Stock Exchanges.
For mainboard IPOs, SEBI provides an observation report on the draft offer documents within 30 days from the date of receipt of the draft offer documents. The observation letter issued by SEBI is valid for 12 months. The issuing company has to clear the comments, make clarifications and initiate the IPO within 12 months from the date of the SEBI observation letter.
SEBI requires 15 days to issue an observation report on the clarifications/responses received from the commercial banks on the original observation letter.
The DRHP application process is conducted by the issuer and a merchant banker. Below are some guidelines and standards for filing the offering document:
RHP stands for Red Herring Prospectus and is an improved/altered version of DRHP issued in case of book-building issues.
An RHP is filed with SEBI, exchanges and RoC once the IPO application has been approved. The RHP contains all the latest and updated financial statements. All changes to the offering structure and corporate information and all other updates and modifications to the DRHP are included in the RHP. The RHP contains all details except the price or number of shares of the issue.
The IPO prospectus is the final and definitive offering document that contains all relevant information. This includes the offering price, the number of shares offered and the size of the net offering.
In the case of a fixed-price issue, this document is registered with the Company Register prior to the opening of the issue. In the case of a book building issue (price discovery), it shall be registered with the Registrar of Companies after the closing of the issue.
Information contained in a final prospectus together with all other information:
An abridged prospectus is a mini/summary version of the offering document issued together with the application form. An abridged prospectus contains a summary of the offer document with all relevant information. Under the Companies Act, an abridged prospectus must accompany each application form.
An abridged prospectus saves investors time and ensures they do not miss important details by providing them with the key information and features of the full prospectus at a glance.
An abridged prospectus contains information such as promoter details, price range, minimum bid lot and provisional deadlines, BRLM details, names of intermediaries, business overview and strategy, board details, the object of the issue, financial statements, a summary of claims and regulatory actions, etc.
For investors looking to understand the IPO quickly, the following sections are pertinent:
An IPO prospectus is a legal document that must contain all the information as per the guidelines laid down by SEBI.
The DRHP format, the RHP format and the prospectus format all remain the same. The RHP is an updated version of the DRHP and the final prospectus is an updated version of the RHP with all the latest changes and pricing information.
Refer to the below-extracted IPO Prospectus sample that gives an idea of the information an offer document needs to include.
In this section, let us take a detailed look at the contents of an IPO prospectus:
The DRHP and RHP are the offering documents that must be issued in the event of an IPO. They both contain the same content, but the information differs because one document is a draft and the other is an updated version of the draft.
DRHP is the primary offering document, also known as the draft offering document.
RHP is the updated version of the Draft Prospectus includes all the latest changes made after the publication of the Draft Document and the changes proposed by SEBI.
DRHP includes Business details, offer structure, investor allocation, management details, shareholding structure, risk factors, and legal information, financial information, terms of issue, offer of issue etc.
RHP contains all information included in the DRHP with updated financials, issue dates, and changes to previously mentioned information.
Preliminary document to
Updated document with all changes incorporated to announce IPO dates.
Book-Building Issue: This does not contain the issue price, number of shares, and total issue shares.
Fixed Price Issue: It contains the issue size, price, and total number of offered shares.
Book-Building Issue: It includes issue dates and updated financials.
Fixed Price Issue: There is no RHP in case of fixed price issue. Its DRHP and Final Prospectus.
Filed and submitted at the time of application submission.
Filed and drafted after the DRHP approval.
Mainboard IPO: SEBI approval
SME IPO: Exchange approval
SEBI approval is required.
DRHP is mandatory for every IPO.
RHP is required in case of book-built issues. Once the price is determined after the closing of the offering, the company will file a final prospectus updating the pricing information.
In the case of a fixed-price issue, the final prospectus is issued directly because the price is fixed in advance. No RHP is required for a fixed-price offering.
RHP applies to IPOs and FPOs, while shelf prospectus applies to public offerings of bonds (NCDs).
Red Herring Prospectus is issued in case of an IPO or FPO.
Shelf prospectus is issued when a company wants to issue bonds (e.g. NCDs).
Every time a company wants to issue shares in the form of IPO or Follow-on public offering (FPO), the issuer company has to file RHP with SEBI. RHP is required in case of book-built issues.
With a shelf prospectus, a company can issue the bonds up to four times.
The prospectus is one of the most important factors in applying for an IPO. It introduces the issuer to investors and allows them to learn about the company's operations, related risk factors, capital structure, offering details, management details, share ownership, financial statements, and intermediary information. Investors can evaluate all aspects before deciding whether or not to invest in the company. DRHP and RHP contain all the information about the company and the offering structure, while the final prospectus contains the IPO price, total number of shares and net proceeds.