HomeNewsBusinessMarketsKabhi Khushi Kabhi Gham: IPO listings gather pace, but markets turn selective

Kabhi Khushi Kabhi Gham: IPO listings gather pace, but markets turn selective

Tata Capital and LG Electronics India debut amid crowded pipeline; fund managers say hype is fading, investors are scrutinizing cash flows and valuations.

October 07, 2025 / 10:27 IST
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The IPO buzz seems to be getting more challenged now as investors become selective as “the market is maturing”, said Pankaj Tibrewal, CIO at Ikigai Asset Managers.
The IPO buzz seems to be getting more challenged now as investors become selective as “the market is maturing”, said Pankaj Tibrewal, CIO at Ikigai Asset Managers.

India’s IPO market is buzzing again with two heavyweight offerings — Tata Capital’s Rs 15,511 crore issue and LG Electronics India’s Rs 11,607 crore OFS — hitting the bourses this week. Yet even as listings accelerate, investors are showing signs of caution, choosing quality over sheer momentum, markets experts said.

The IPO buzz seems to be getting more challenged now as investors become selective as “the market is maturing”, said Pankaj Tibrewal, CIO at Ikigai Asset Managers. “Many companies showcase strong revenue and profit growth in the run-up to their listing, but this often comes with weak cash flow generation. Once listed, both revenue and profit growth tend to taper, leaving investors exposed if they chase momentum without discipline,” he added.

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The shift is visible in performance. Out of 268 IPOs so far this year, 150 are above issue price while 119 are trading in the red. “Most were oversubscribed, but growth was low or negative. The market hasn’t been charitable this time,” Tibrewal added. As of end of September, the pipeline saw 74 IPOs, cumulatively raising Rs 85,000 crore in the market.

Several recent IPOs, despite being heavily oversubscribed, have delivered lacklustre listings. VMS TMT, which saw a robust subscription of 102 times, debuted 4 percent below its issue price. GK Energy, subscribed 94 times, managed a modest 10 percent gain on listing. Amanta Healthcare, subscribed 83 times, offered a limited 13 percent listing-day return. Meanwhile, Seshaasai Technologies, with a 70-times subscription, listed 3 percent below its issue price.