Chalet Hotels 
Dealstreet

Khaitan & Co, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas act on Chalet Hotels QIP

The qualified institutions placement of equity shares aggregate to ₹1,000 crore.

Bar & Bench

Chalet Hotels Limited has made a qualified institutions placement aggregating to ₹1,000 crore.

Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co advised Chalet Hotels on this QIP.

The transaction team consisted of Nikhil Naredi (Partner), Chinmay Sethia (Senior Associate), Harsh Loonker (Senior Associate), Rakshita Poddar (Associate), Shruthi Hariharan (Associate) Rishika Sharma (Associate) and Manish Soni (Associate).

Nikhil Naredi

Khaitan & Co acted as Legal Counsel as to Indian Law to JM Financial Limited and Kotak Mahindra Capital Company Limited (Book Running Lead Managers) in relation to qualified Institutions Placement.

The transaction team consisted of Subhayu Sen (Partner), Aayush Mohata (Partner), Ritika Khare (Senior Associate), Ira Pandya (Associate), Bhavna Sancheti (Associate), Aayush Virani (Associate) and Arjun Kapur (Associate).

Subhayu Sen, Aayush Mohata

Chalet Hotels is the owner, developer, asset manager and operator of high-end hotels and mixed-use assets in key metro cities and leisure locations in India, including Mumbai Metropolitan Region, Hyderabad, Bengaluru, National Capital Region, Pune and Lonavala.

The Company’s hotels are branded with global brands such as Marriott, Westin, Sheraton, Novotel, Taj, and Hyatt.

If you would like your Deals, Columns, Press Releases to be published on Bar & Bench, please fill in the form available here.

Bombay High Court dismisses PIL to house arbitration centre in Goa's old High Court building

"Are you not a part of this republic?" Supreme Court negatives Tamil Nadu's resistance to Navodaya schools

Deepam lighting case: Dargah lawyer alleges natural justice violation, tells Madras HC that Justice Swaminathan shut him out of hearing

WhatsApp required to follow CCI order on giving users greater say in data sharing with Meta companies: NCLAT

Delhi High Court directs government to consider district court lawyers' objections to draft Advocates Protection Bill

SCROLL FOR NEXT