IndiGo ₹6,831 Cr Exit Alert | NSE vs BSE: Showdown Begins | ₹850/month Starlink Connection Podcast Por  arte de portada

IndiGo ₹6,831 Cr Exit Alert | NSE vs BSE: Showdown Begins | ₹850/month Starlink Connection

IndiGo ₹6,831 Cr Exit Alert | NSE vs BSE: Showdown Begins | ₹850/month Starlink Connection

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Welcome to Top of the Morning by Mint.. I’m Nelson John and here are today’s top stories. 1. IndiGo’s Gangwal Plans ₹6,831 Cr Stake Sale In a major move, IndiGo co-founder Rakesh Gangwal and his family trust are set to sell up to ₹6,831 crore worth of shares in the airline through a block deal. The sale, expected to happen Tuesday, involves up to a 3.4% stake at a floor price of ₹5,175 per share. Gangwal and his trust together own nearly 13.5% of the company. With shares up 461% over five years and near 52-week highs, investors are watching closely—this could mark a strategic exit or just profit booking. 2. NSE vs BSE: Expiry Day Showdown Begins Sebi’s new circular limiting equity derivative expiries to either Tuesday or Thursday has kicked off a turf war. NSE wants to shift its Nifty expiry to Tuesday—the very day BSE had claimed earlier for its Sensex contracts. If approved, NSE could see a 5% boost in market share, while BSE may have to move to Thursday or risk losing volumes. The final decision is due by June 15, but until then, it’s a race to lock in the more lucrative day. 3. Starlink Set to Launch in India at ₹850/month Elon Musk’s satellite internet service, Starlink, is close to entering India after securing a Letter of Intent from the DoT. Plans may start at just ₹850 per month with unlimited data—among the cheapest globally. The goal? Ten million subscribers. But urban surcharges, spectrum charges, and licensing levies could raise prices. Even so, Starlink hopes to bridge India’s digital divide, particularly in rural areas with poor connectivity. 4. Leela Hotels Launches ₹3,500 Cr IPO Luxury hotel chain Leela is making its market debut with a ₹3,500 crore IPO—the largest ever in India’s hospitality sector. Backed by Brookfield, the IPO is priced attractively but comes with baggage: ₹2,567 crore in debt. Most of the proceeds will go toward deleveraging. With new properties planned and EBITDA margins at 50%, Leela hopes to ride the luxury upcycle, though rivals like Taj and Oberoi still lead in occupancy and brand recall. 5. India Pushes US to Ease Fruit Import Rules India is lobbying hard to get better market access for fruits like mangoes, pomegranates, and guavas under a proposed trade deal with the US. After 25 tonnes of mangoes were destroyed at US ports, India wants faster approvals and localized certification. Despite a 28% rise in exports to the US over two years, regulatory bottlenecks remain. Exporters say the deal could be a game-changer—but time, and cold storage, are running short
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