Omni Industries lists on JSE Junior Market after oversubscribed $500m share offer
Omni Industries Company Limited made its debut on the Jamaica Stock Exchange Junior Market on Thursday, marking the first junior-board listing of 2024 and the exchange’s opening equity IPO for the year.
The manufacturer raised $500 million through a combined initial public offering and offer for sale: 250 million ordinary shares were sold by existing holders and 250 million were offered by subscription. Managing director Patrick Comp, addressing the ceremony virtually, said the issue was oversubscribed, reflecting investor confidence in the nearly 50-year-old firm. NCB Capital Markets, lead broker and arranger, reported the transaction was oversubscribed by about 66 per cent within four business days, with the general pool roughly four times subscribed across 2,686 applications.
Shares began trading under the symbol OMNI at $1. Jamaica Stock Exchange Group managing director Dr Marlin Street Forrest said the listing reserved a dedicated tranche for employees and welcomed the company’s 2,686 shareholders, well above the 100-shareholder minimum. With Omni’s market capitalisation put at $2.5 billion, she said junior-market capitalisation now stands at about $143 billion, while total capital raised by junior-market issuers exceeds $21 billion. Combined JSE market capitalisation was cited at roughly $1.82 trillion, with 47 securities on the junior market and 153 listed instruments overall.
Omni describes itself as Jamaica’s largest industrial packaging manufacturer and a major supplier of PVC pipes and fittings, tracing its roots to a small PVC operation. Comp outlined plans to upgrade equipment, expand product lines, and pursue regional markets. Chairman Von White, a 38-year veteran of the firm, stressed governance, transparency, and social responsibility as priorities for the listed entity.
NCB’s Alex Johnson said regulators and transaction partners helped close the deal, and noted trading was briefly halted after the price hit the exchange’s circuit-breaker threshold—a sign of strong opening demand. The JSE has moved to T+1 settlement and longer trading hours; Street Forrest urged more manufacturers to use the market to raise growth capital.
Syndicated from Jamaica Stock Exchange (Video) · originally published .
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