NSE Files $2-Billion DRHP: A Major Milestone for India’s Capital Markets
The National Stock Exchange (NSE) has officially restarted its decade-long journey toward a public listing by filing its Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) with SEBI. This highly anticipated $2-billion Initial Public Offering (IPO) marks a significant turning point for the exchange, which has faced regulatory hurdles for nearly nine years.
An Offer for Sale Driven by Global and Domestic Giants
The proposed IPO is structured entirely as an Offer for Sale (OFS), meaning the NSE itself will not receive any fresh capital; instead, existing shareholders are offloading portions of their holdings. The DRHP proposes the sale of up to 14.89 crore shares with a face value of Re 1 each.
Major international and domestic institutions are set to participate in this massive liquidity event. Tiger Global has emerged as the largest seller, proposing to offload 1.48 crore shares, which represents over 13% of the total offer. Other significant global participants include Aranda Investments (Mauritius) and SAIF II-SE Investments.
On the domestic front, several prominent financial institutions are reducing their stakes. IDBI Bank plans to sell 74.15 lakh shares, followed by SBI with 64.28 lakh shares and SBI Capital Markets with 53.62 lakh shares. Other notable sellers include IFCI, HDFC Standard Life, Bajaj Holdings & Investment, and Bank of Baroda.
Valuation and Market Positioning
The NSE is currently commanding a massive valuation in the unlisted market. Based on current prices ranging between Rs 1,950 and Rs 2,050 per share, the exchange is valued at approximately Rs 5 lakh crore. This valuation would position it among India's most valuable listed financial institutions.
Industry analysts note that while the NSE's valuation is high—trading near 45x FY26 earnings—it remains relatively attractive compared to its peers. For context, the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) trades at around 70x earnings, while Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX) trades at approximately 80x. The settlement of the long-standing co-location controversy has removed the regulatory "overhang" that had previously suppressed its listing prospects.
Risks and Regulatory Tailwinds
Malgré l'optimisme, la bourse fait face à des risques sectoriels spécifiques. Les analystes avertissent que les bénéfices de la NSE dépendent fortement de l'activité de trading sur produits dérivés, qui est intrinsèquement volatile. De plus, les récentes interventions de la SEBI visant à limiter la participation des particuliers dans le segment des contrats à terme et des options (F&O) pourraient impacter les volumes de transactions et, par conséquent, les revenus de la bourse.
Cependant, le dépôt réussi du DRHP, suite à l'obtention du certificat de non-objection de la SEBI plus tôt cette année, signale que la bourse a mené à bien les réformes de gouvernance exigées après l'affaire de co-localisation de 2015. Cet IPO devrait être un catalyseur massif pour le marché primaire indien dans les mois à venir.
Points clés
- Stratégie de sortie pure : L'IPO de 2 milliards de dollars est une offre de vente (OFS) par laquelle des acteurs majeurs tels que Tiger Global, SBI et IDBI Bank céderont leurs participations, plutôt que la NSE qui lèverait de nouveaux capitaux.
- Valorisation premium : Se négociant à environ 45x les bénéfices de l'exercice 2026 sur le marché non coté, la NSE est valorisée à près de 5 lakh crore de roupies, bien qu'elle reste moins chère que la BSE et la MCX sur une base de multiples.
- Contexte réglementaire : La cotation fait suite à des années de retard causées par la controverse sur la co-localisation, mais elle fait face à des vents contraires potentiels dus aux récentes restrictions de la SEBI sur les volumes de trading F&O.