Tue, 7 Jul 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jul 7, 2026 · 10:40
India News Updated Jul 7, 2026

Govt Launches OFS in Cochin Shipyard at Rs 1,400/Share

The Government of India has launched an Offer for Sale in Cochin Shipyard Limited with a floor price of Rs 1,400 per share. The base offer includes a 2.52% stake divestment with an additional 2.52% green-shoe option for oversubscription. The OFS opens for non-retail investors on July 7 and retail investors on July 8. This move is part of broader government initiatives to strengthen India's maritime sector, including the Maritime Development Fund and Shipbuilding Financial Assistance Scheme.

Government launches OFS in Cochin shipyard to sell 2.52% at Rs 1,400 per share

New Delhi, July 7

The Government of India on Monday announced an Offer for Sale in Cochin Shipyard Limited, with a floor price of Rs 1,400 per share.

The government will divest a base 2.52 per cent stake in the state-owned shipbuilder. It has also included an additional 2.52 per cent stake under the green-shoe option in case of oversubscription.

Secretary, Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM), said in a post on X, "Government announces Offer for Sale in Cochin Shipyard Ltd (CSL) with a base offer of 2.52% of its paid-up equity and an additional 2.52% as the green-shoe option in case of over subscription."

The Secretary further said, "Floor price has been fixed at Rs.1400 per share. OFS opens for non-retail investors on 7th July 2026. Retail investors get to bid on 8th July 2026."

India's maritime sector plays a key role in the country's economy, with nearly 95 per cent of trade by volume and around 70 per cent by value moving through maritime routes.

To strengthen the sector, the government has launched several initiatives. The Maritime Development Fund (MDF), with a corpus of Rs 25,000 crore, aims to provide long-term financing to boost shipping capacity and shipbuilding.

The revamped Shipbuilding Financial Assistance Scheme (SBFAS), with an outlay of Rs 24,736 crore, seeks to address cost disadvantages for domestic shipbuilders and promote ship-breaking. The Shipbuilding Development Scheme (SbDS), with an outlay of Rs 19,989 crore, focuses on developing new shipbuilding clusters, expanding shipyards and providing risk coverage.

The government is also setting up the Indian Ship Technology Centre (ISTC) in Visakhapatnam at a cost of Rs 305 crore. The centre will focus on ship design, research and development, engineering and skill development.

The Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision 2047 serves as the government's long-term roadmap for the sector. It envisages investments of nearly Rs 80 lakh crore across ports, coastal shipping, inland waterways, shipbuilding and green shipping initiatives.

The vision also includes measures such as green shipping corridors, green hydrogen bunkering at major ports and the promotion of methanol-fuelled vessels. It outlines more than 300 initiatives aimed at making India one of the world's leading maritime and shipbuilding nations by 2047.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Looks like a good opportunity for retail investors! The green-shoe option is a nice safety for oversubscription. 🚢 But I'm a bit cautious—₹1,400 is quite high for a PSU shipyard stock, even if the government is pumping money into shipbuilding. Will watch the market sentiment.

James A

Interesting. Divesting a small stake like 2.52% is not going to change control or operations much. Seems like the government is just testing the waters for bigger shipyard divestments later. The Maritime Vision 2047 with ₹80 lakh crore is massive—India could become a global shipbuilding hub if executed well.

Rohit P

Good to see the government taking concrete steps for the maritime sector. But I wish they would focus more on modernizing shipyards like CSL instead of just offloading shares. Still, with the Shipbuilding Financial Assistance Scheme and MDF, there's hope. Let's see if retail gets a good discount.

Sarah B

A smart strategic move. Divesting a small stake now while the shipbuilding sector is getting government attention could attract quality investors. The Indian Technology Centre in Vizag is also a great addition. India's shipbuilding potential is huge, especially with green shipping trends. 🚢

Vikram M

Honestly, I'm skeptical. The floor price at ₹1,400 seems inflated compared to recent PSU divestments. The government always talks big about shipbuilding but ground-level execution is slow. Let's not forget the delays in the Indian Ship Technology Centre. Hope this OFS gets good response though.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked