Did retail give exits to NRIs, some FPIs in Rajesh Exports

A clutch of non-resident Indians (NRIs) and foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) divested a large chunk of their shareholding over the past three years at the expense of small retail shareholders in Rajesh Exports, the company in regulatory crosshairs for alleged misrepresentation of financial statements.

Interestingly, as these institutional and wealthy investors sharply pared their stakes, the company’s share price plunged by a staggering 87% over three years through 30 March this year, for which the latest shareholding pattern is available.

holding up to 2 lakh each held just 1.6% of the company’s equity capital as of 31 March 2023. That quarter, NRIs held a 13.77% stake, and FPIs held a 17.60% stake.

A year later, retail shareholding jumped to 11.42%, while NRI holding plunged to 7.35%, and that of declined to 15.08%, according to exchange data.

By the quarter ending 30 March 2026 (FY26 end), retail holding stood at 14.13%, while NRI holding had plunged further to 5.27%, and FPI holding had declined to 14.25%.

Between March 2023 and March 2026, when retail raised their stakes in the gold manufacturer, and NRI and FPI sharply cut theirs, the REL scrip plummeted 87% to a five-year closing low of 80.38 by FY26-end from 610.10 by FY23-end, per Bloomberg data.



While the price has since recovered by nearly 30% through Thursday’s close of 103.92, the Securities and Exchange Board of India’s (Sebi’s) interim order alleging the company misrepresented its financial statements left the stock frozen at the 5% lower circuit throughout the entire trading session.

“This is a classic case of pump and dump by influential shareholders on the unsuspecting public,” said Shriram Subramanian, founder and managing director of proxy advisory firm InGovern.

“L’affaire Rajesh Exports has all the telltale signs of a pump and dump operation,” said senior securities lawyer Chirag Shah. “Surprising that it took a shareholder complaint as late as 2024 for Sebi to start an investigation. Retail shareholding has increased manifold, and ‘smart’ money has offloaded. Let’s wait for the statutory auditors to come up with some novel excuses this time too and then seek immunity with impunity.”

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