Shares and bonds of Discount Investment Corp. (DISI) are sliding downwards because investors are questioning that the holding company may struggle to repay debt after an IPO of a subsidiary was pulled by the company. Discount’s 2.8 billion shekels ($725 million) bonds due Dec. 2025 got the yield of 4.95 percent and it raised 1.3 percentage point to 7.39 percent, the highest this year. But its stocks plunged 24 percent to 9.50 shekels. This means that they have dropped 62 percent this year. On the other hand, shares of parent IDB Development Corp. dropped to 2.135 shekels, which is 17% down.The world's largest generic agro-chemicals,Adama Agricultural Solutions Ltd. failed to make agreement with investors on pricing. Then it postponed an initial public offering. Currently, Discount has 40 percent of Adama. However, IDB seems to wait for a successful IPO to inject value into the company and refinance debt. IDB has Argnetine businessman Eduardo Elsztain and Moti Ben-Moshe. After Nochi Dankner failed to bring in investors for the company to repay debt, he stepped down. Yaniv Pagot, chief strategist for Israel-based Ayalon Group Ltd, said,“The company has enough cash to repay debt comfortably till 2016, but what will happen once that cash ends, from 2017 onwards?”He added that Discound could have used valuation of Adama as collateral to refinance debta and raise additional funds by selling shares in a secondary offering.At the end of June, Discount had cash and cash equivalents of 1.86 billion shekels and according to the second-quarter result, it had net debt of 3.4 billion shekels.