Asia’s oldest bourse Bombay Stock Exchange, which has been losing market share to the National Stock Exchange for the past few years, is banking on its new technology that has reduced response time of orders to gain market share, and is gearing up for an initial public offering by end of 2014.
“An IPO could not happen as regulatory clearances have been taking time.
“We need two approvals form regulators.
“We hope to dilute either 10 per cent or 25 per cent, depending on how many shareholders would like to exit.
“We hope to complete the IPO by end of 2014,” said Ashish kumar Chauhan, managing director and CEO of BSE.
BSE has brought in the new technology from Deutsche Bourse.
During the past few years, Chauhan said, NSE had been executing orders about 10 times faster than BSE.
Over the past few years, BSE has increased the order execution time to 10 milliseconds from 300 milliseconds.
And, with the new technology, BSE would be able to bring the response time down from around 10 milliseconds to 100 micro seconds over the next few months, added Chauhan.
“The new system is now 50 times faster and has also brought down cost of operations. This would slowly bring back more traders on BSE platform,” he said.
According to the top executive of the bourse, while trading volume is higher at NSE, delivery has always been much higher at BSE.
In trading, BSE has a market share of just about 14-15 per cent, but in delivery, Chauhan said, its market share was about 35-40 per cent.
At present, BSE has about 5,300 stocks, while NSE has about 1,600.
To increase market share, BSE has opened new segments for trading, including offer for sale, trading in small and medium enterprises, mutual fund distribution, e-IPOs