NSE Files $2-Billion DRHP: A Massive Milestone for India's Capital Markets

After a nearly nine-year hiatus, the National Stock Exchange (NSE) has officially restarted its public listing journey by filing its Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) with SEBI. This highly anticipated $2-billion initial public offering marks the end of a long regulatory saga and promises to be one of the most significant market events in recent years.

Details of the $2-Billion Offer for Sale

The proposed IPO is structured entirely as an Offer for Sale (OFS), meaning the NSE itself will not receive any fresh capital from the proceeds. Instead, existing shareholders will be offloading their holdings. The DRHP proposes the sale of up to 14.89 crore shares, each with a face value of Re 1.

The sale includes several heavyweight institutional investors. Tiger Global has emerged as the largest seller, proposing to offload 1.48 crore shares, which constitutes over 13% of the total offer size. Other major international participants include Aranda Investments (Mauritius) and SAIF II-SE Investments.

On the domestic front, several prominent banks and financial institutions are set to reduce 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 participants include IFCI, HDFC Standard Life, Bajaj Holdings & Investment, and Bank of Baroda.

Valuation and Market Position

The timing of the filing comes after SEBI issued a no-objection certificate, clearing the final regulatory hurdle that had stalled the exchange's 2016 IPO attempt. The original delay was triggered by the co-location controversy, where allegations of preferential access to market data surfaced in 2015.

Based on recent unlisted market trades priced between Rs 1,950 and Rs 2,050 per share, NSE is valued at approximately Rs 5 lakh crore. This would position it among India's most valuable listed financial institutions. While analysts note that trading at nearly 45x FY26 earnings is a premium valuation, it remains relatively more conservative than peers like BSE (70x) and MCX (80x).

Risks and Regulatory Headwinds

Despite the excitement, market analysts have raised caution regarding the exchange's earnings stability. NSE’s revenue is heavily dependent on derivatives trading activity, which is prone to volatility.

De plus, les récentes interventions réglementaires de la SEBI visant à freiner la participation excessive des particuliers dans le segment des contrats à terme et des options (F&O) pourraient avoir un impact sur les volumes de transactions. Les investisseurs devront mettre en balance le statut de quasi-monopole de la bourse et ces changements potentiels dans la dynamique du marché et la surveillance réglementaire du segment des produits dérivés.

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