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What To Do When a Stock Gets Delisted

Delisting sounds scaryu2014your share suddenly stops trading on the exchange and you wonder if your money just vanished. It hasnu2019t.

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What To Do When a Stock Gets Delisted

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  1. WHAT TO DO WHEN A STOCK GETS DELISTED Delisting sounds scary—your share suddenly stops trading on the exchange and you wonder if your money just vanished. It hasn’t.

  2. WHAT DELISTING MEANS • Voluntary delisting Promoters/acquirers choose to take the company private. They must make an Exit Offer to public shareholders, typically via Reverse Book Building (RBB) to discover the exit price Compulsory delisting Exchanges force the delisting due to serious non-compliance (e.g., persistent listing-agreement violations, non-payment of fees, failure to redress investor grievances).

  3. 1 Strategic buyouts/PE take-private deals • Low free float or thin trading; cost of compliance outweighs benefits 2 WHY COMPANIES • Corporate restructuring/mergers aiming for operational flexibility 3 GET DELISTED Global parent wants 100% ownership 4 Regulatory arbitrage or capital-structure redesign (less common, but real) 5

  4. Letter of Offer / Public Announcements DOCUMENTATION Your bid confirmation screenshot/acknowledgment CHECKLIST Contract note & funds payout proof Demat statement reflecting share debit Bank statement for proceeds credit Any forms used for the one-year exit window Final delisting notice and settlement intimation

  5. CASE STUDY Situation: You hold 1,000 shares of ABC Ltd. bought at ₹120. Promoters propose voluntary delisting; floor price is ₹160. You bid ₹175 during RBB. Discovered price turns out ₹172; acquirer accepts and achieves 90%+. Your shares are accepted and settled at ₹172. Gain: ₹52,000 before taxes (₹172–₹120 × 1,000). Had you skipped RBB, you could still tender at ₹172 within the one-year exit window—but you’d add admin steps and timing risk.

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