Symmetry Group Limited — with an aim to work on the development of artificial intelligence (AI) and data-powered marketing technology, tools, and platforms — is set to launch an initial public offering (IPO) and intends to hold the book building on August 8-9.
Walking the Geo.tv down the entire journey of the IPO, Symmetry Group Limited chief executive Sarocsh Ahmed explained how August was the optimal time for the launch.
“The timing is carefully considered, accounting for approvals from the Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) and the Security and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP). The optimal timing for the IPO considers market and economic conditions, as well as the broader political landscape,” he said, adding that the company has been planning this IPO since 2021.
Ahmed — whose company is offering 101,240,082 shares as part of the IPO — maintained that it was a long wait and the work was going on, and now they have reached the level that they need funds to continue the expansion plans.
He stated: “If we look into that context, we all, in fact, management and the advisers were waiting for [some clarity regarding] the International Monetary Fund (IMF) [programme] and now that [standby deal has been signed] the stock market has responded well to it.
“Plus, another important factor to look at was the approval from PSX and SECP, so the last approval we had to have was from the SECP. And that we received it on June 1.”
He went on to explain that it was a time-bound approval and the company — which would be listed on the main board of PSX — needed to close the IPO by August 31. “We’ve fixed August 8 and 9 for the book building as we cannot delay this because we have the public portion and refund phase as well after that,” he added.
Referring to the bullish momentum at the benchmark KSE-100 index, the startup co-founder said “he feels there couldn’t have been a better time than now… we do see stability, at least for six months Pakistan will not default, that’s a good thing.”
Shedding light on his expectations from the book building — a process undertaken to elicit demand for shares offered through which bids are collected from the bidders and a book is built which depicts demand for the shares at different price levels — stage, Ahmed revealed that the response so far was overwhelming and “I personally believe we’ll have an oversubscription.”
Ahmed, while sharing why the company decided to keep the floor price at 4.25 per share, said: “We had to keep the floor price at low levels because when we were taking approvals, the market wasn’t performing this well and plus the general feedback that we received from investors was that the initial price of Rs5.50 was too high so we revised our strategy and gave a discount.”
He further added that now the company is leaving it to the market to discover the strike price and with the recent rally at the PSX “we are hopeful that the market is in a state where our strike price can be higher.”
‘All digital indicators are on the rise’
In response to a question regarding the effect of an increase in taxes on digital services in the recent budget on his company and in general, Ahmed highlighted that “data consumption has increased, we see, in every budget, there is an increase in taxes but did we observe any negative impact of it?”
“All the digital indicators are on the rise including mobile, broadband subscriptions and issuing licences of digital banks, digital transactions, and e-commerce,” he maintained, adding, “There is another indicator which is digital channels such as social media and there is a rise in their traffic”.
Highlighting the good from one of the major challenges — rising population — the president said “we should not miss our population growth which is very high”. “It is a problem but there is an opportunity in that too. Every year, a new number of people emerges as a user. When they graduate, they are natives of the technology,” he stated.
HR — main resource in Pakistan
Ahmed, while commenting on the actual IT potential in Pakistan, highlighted that the main resource Pakistan has is HR (human resources).
“Some of our clients from the Middle East who are outsourcing their business and who used to go to India are now diverting towards Pakistan because their cost in India has doubled. Their currency has become strong and the resource asks for more money given the global inflation,” he explained.
“Currently, in Pakistan, we can see a huge discount in resource hiring which is a huge benefit and if we connect it with our HR and offer timely products and solutions and market them, then we can generate good revenues.”
“When officials claim that we will have exports worth $20 billion in the IT sector in the next five years. We can do that and there is nothing wrong with this. Currently, the numbers are half reported and the main reason is the exchange rate difference, most people divert their money to other kinds of investment or hold it outside the country.”
“Meanwhile, the money brought into the country by freelancers is counted under the head of home remittances, and if we properly record these numbers then it may be counted as nearly $4 billion of our IT exports.”
He claimed that the problem was not that digital growth would stop due to the brain drain because consumption was there — people are talking about inclusion and digital banks. “Easypaisa and JazzCash have transformed society, the market is there, people consume mobile data for whatever reason — be it entertainment or work.”
Quality should come first
Ahmed highlighted that the potential of freelancing is huge in Pakistan and in order to provide a platform for this industry, the private sector should step forward. “Freelance associations should work more vigilantly to support the industry,” he said while identifying the biggest challenge — which needs to be controlled as well — is quality.
“Pakistan’s problem, not only in freelancing but other industries too, is fraudulent activities — i.e. charging money from clients but not delivering work on time. Because of such activities clients will outsource work to your company only once and then poor rating will shrink your client list and badly reflect on the country as well,” he maintained.
Startup owners need to bootstrap
The co-founder of a company further added that all startups needed to bootstrap — i.e. getting oneself into or out of a situation using existing resources — and they should not go lavish on expenses because burnout models would no longer work as the world has progressed far more than anticipated in the past one year and “we can see that funding has stopped pouring in Pakistan.”
He explained that “inflows take a backseat only when companies don’t offer profit/bottom line”.
“Business models have changed — previously it was all about getting traction or a number of users on topline and a lot of times it was only about the number of users and not about profit. Time has changed. We now need a profitable business. All our startups need better financial advisory where they are encouraged to build profitable and sustainable businesses. The problem is that if one raises $20 million — the amount is huge especially when working in Pakistan — how can one burn all the money in one year?”
“I personally believe that pitchers should always have less money compared to what they have demanded. They should get a reasonable amount which is used to fulfil their requirements and then they should go for the next round in that manner the startup owners will know that they have to strictly work on something but if they get extra money of which he/she has no plan then it won’t work.”
“First and foremost we need to correct our intentions because we [Pakistanis] have a habit of doing fraud which is not good — neither for the industry nor for the country. And secondly, we should work on our bottom lines, bootstrap ourselves and take baby steps to grow,” he added.
A spokesperson for the office of the Auditor-General of Pakistan (AGP) announced on Monday that the two countries have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to strengthen cooperation in public sector auditing through improved cooperation between audit institutions of both countries, as well as training programs and the exchange of trainers.
This comes as a group from Saudi Arabia’s General Court of Audit (GCA), headed by GCA President Dr. Hussam bin Abdulmohsen Alangari, arrived in Pakistan on Sunday for a four-day visit.
The agreement was signed during AGP Muhammad Ajmal Gondal’s meeting with the Saudi delegates, aiming to strengthen audit cooperation, enhance knowledge-sharing, and improve governance, transparency and accountability in government spending.
Public relations officer Muhammad Raza Irfan of the AGP’s office told Arab News that the deal will further advance bilateral collaboration between Saudi Arabia and Pakistan in addition to enhancing professional ties between the two nations’ auditing institutions.
In a statement released from his office, AGP Gondal was cited as saying, “This collaboration marks a significant step toward fostering international cooperation in auditing.”
“The exchange of ideas and methodologies will undoubtedly strengthen our capacity to meet emerging challenges and set new benchmarks for public accountability.”
Discussions at Monday’s meeting focused on fostering closer ties between the Supreme Audit Institutions (SAIs) of Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, sharing innovative audit methodologies, and planning collaborative initiatives for the future, according to the AGP office.
The two parties decided to increase their knowledge of theme, environmental, and impact audits as well as to exchange best practices in audit standards, performance audits, and citizen participation audits.
The statement added, “It also agreed to exchange trainers, address new auditing challenges, plan cooperative audits, including a performance audit on the oil and gas sector in 2025, and work together on training programs.”
Both sides reaffirmed their shared commitment to promoting transparency, accountability and excellence in public sector auditing.
The Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) privatization process will be restarted by the federal government, and expressions of interest would be requested within the month. Officials stated that the Prime Minister’s Committee on Privatization will convene to make the final decision.
Usman Bajwa, the secretary of the Privatization Commission, gave a briefing on the updated procedure to the National Assembly Standing Committee on Privatization. Additionally, he disclosed that airlines other than PIA are now able to compete with regional carriers thanks to IMF-approved aircraft tax concessions.
Farooq Sattar, the chairman of the privatization committee, underlined the importance of giving PIA workers at least five years of job security. Employee protection will continue to be a top priority and will be resolved prior to bidding, the Privatization Commission promised.
PIA’s liabilities totaling Rs650 billion have already been assumed by the government, and an additional Rs45 billion in outstanding debts must be paid before the privatization process can begin. As of the now, PIA has assets around Rs155 billion and liabilities worth Rs200 billion. It will be necessary for the new buyer to expand the fleet by 15 to 20 aircraft.
Additionally, the Privatization Committee has sought a timeline for the privatization of Faisalabad, Gujranwala, and Islamabad Electric Supply Companies. Officials stated that after the appointment of a financial advisor, the privatization process for these companies will accelerate.