NSE IPO, Reliance Jio IPO: The two upcoming mega initial public offerings (IPOs) – NSE and Reliance Jio – in India share a deep bond rooted in retail market sentiment. With a collective value of approximately 64,000 crore ($7 billion), the overarching question is whether this investor enthusiasm can be sustained.
NSE IPO, Reliance Jio IPO poised to capture strong interest from retail investors
If the indications from grey market premiums are taken into consideration, both the $3 billion-issue of National Stock Exchange of India Ltd and the $4 billion public listing of billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s telecom and digital media giant are poised to capture strong interest from retail investors, especially, those hungry for the kind of market momentums that secondary equities have recently failed to deliver.
While global capital flooded into artificial intelligence and semiconductor booms across Taipei and Seoul – driving South Korean equities to triple and Taiwanese stocks to double – India’s benchmark index has remained stagnant over the last two years. Adding to these headwinds, geopolitical conflict involving Iran has strained the energy-dependent nation’s balance of payments, leading to a sharp decline in the rupee that has driven away foreign institutional capital.
However, with the ongoing peace talks between the United States and Iran, the spotlight has shifted back to India’s domestic retail investors. Individual stock buyers are only just starting to venture back into the fray after a prolonged period on the sidelines. Reviving the investing public’s confidence is essential, which is precisely why analysing the parallels and contrasts between these two massive IPOs is so critical.
Both NSE and Jip possess highly defensive business moats
Indian stock market participants are deeply connected to both of these corporate giants. Because capital controls limit international investing options, domestic investors rely heavily on the NSE for wealth creation. In the telecom space, Jio leads the national pricing structure for mobile data. Even as newer technologies like satellite broadband emerge, national security priorities are likely to hand Ambani a distinct edge over global contenders like Elon Musk’s Starlink or Jeff Bezos’ Amazon.
Structural differences between NSE and Jio
Yet, despite these similarities, the structural variations between the two issues are profound. The NSE’s long-delayed IPO, which was repeatedly stalled by governance scandals at the bourse, consists entirely of existing shareholders offloading their stakes. In contrast, Jio will be raising fresh capital, utilizing a portion of the proceeds to pay down approximately $3 billion in corporate debt, reported ET.
In more mature markets, the difference between an offer-for-sale and a fresh capital injection is viewed as minor logistical plumbing. In the context of India’s current, fragile market environment, it matters immensely. Because the NSE IPO is purely an offer-for-sale, no fresh cash will enter the bourse’s treasury. Compounding the issue, global giants like Morgan Stanley and Temasek Holdings Pte are among those trimming their exposure. At a time when New Delhi is actively courting NRI dollars to stabilise a weakening Indian rupee, the NSE listing threatens to act as an exit channel for foreign capital.
Ambani’s Jio, on the other hand, is positioned to draw fresh funds. For Jio’s listing to truly succeed, however, the institutions selling NSE stock – ranging from Indian banks and insurance firms to wealthy individuals and foreign funds – must price the initial exchange offering reasonably. Given that the NSE submitted its draft prospectus to the markets regulator SEBI just a day before Jio, the consensus is that the bourse will hit the market first, reported ET.
If the sellers overprice the offer and burn retail investors, the resulting market chill will affect more than just Ambani; the fallout will extend straight to Silicon Valley, impacting tech titans like Sundar Pichai and Mark Zuckerberg, ET reported.
Alphabet Inc. and Meta Platforms Inc. hold significant stakes in Jio, alongside prominent institutions like Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, KKR & Co., and various other sovereign wealth funds and private-equity firms. While these early backers are not liquidating their positions during this IPO, a successful listing allows them to mark up massive valuation gains on their balance sheets. For Google alone, that turns a $4.5 billion stake bought six years ago into a $10 billion asset — more if the shares keep rising after listing, reported ET.
(Disclaimer: The above article is meant for informational purposes only, and should not be considered as any investment advice. ET NOW DIGITAL suggests its readers/audience to consult their financial advisors before making any money-related decisions.)
