“Companies are preferring to take a more tactical approach on whether to proceed or hold back,” according to Bhavesh Shah, managing director & head – Investment Banking, Equirus Capital. “Investor sentiment has made issuers more calibrated about launch windows and pricing.”
Currently, 141 companies have regulatory approvals – valid for a year from the date of clearance – to collectively raise about ₹1.64 lakh crore through IPOs, according to data from Prime Database. At least 80 companies still have an approval window of up to 3-9 months to launch their issues, but bankers are concerned about the investor appetite for new shares, should the secondary markets remain wobbly.
Agencies“Global geopolitical tensions and the recalibration of trade deals are creating a risk-off environment among international institutional investors who anchor large Indian IPO books,” said Ganesh Jagdishen, CEO of Plutus Global – a cross-border M&A and capital raising advisory firm. “Some companies will likely hold up their IPO launches if approval is valid for a little longer.”
Approvals of five companies – Continuum Green Energy Ltd, GSP Crop Science Ltd, Jajoo Rashmi Refractories Ltd, Ajay Poly Ltd and Veritas Finance Ltd – are set to expire over the next two months, according to data from Prime Database.
Rising tensions, a sharp spike in crude oil prices and renewed foreign investor selling triggered a sell-off in the market in the past week. The Sensex decline of about 3% in this period.
“The primary market always takes cues from the secondary market. The ongoing volatility in the secondary market is the key reason behind fewer IPO launches,” said Pranav Haldea, managing director at Prime Database.