NSE Files DRHP for $2-3 Billion IPO: Major Investors Set to Exit

After a nearly nine-year hiatus, the National Stock Exchange (NSE) has officially restarted its journey toward a public listing by filing its Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) with SEBI. This highly anticipated move marks the end of a long regulatory saga, positioning the exchange for one of the largest capital market events in recent Indian history.

An Offer for Sale Driven by Major Global and Domestic Players

The proposed IPO is structured entirely as an Offer for Sale (OFS), meaning the exchange will not receive any fresh capital from the proceeds; 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.

Tiger Global has emerged as the most significant participant in this exit, proposing to sell 1.48 crore shares, which represents over 13% of the total offer size. Other major international investors reducing their stakes include Aranda Investments (Mauritius) and SAIF II-SE Investments. On the domestic front, several prominent financial institutions are participating, including IDBI Bank (74.15 lakh shares), State Bank of India (64.28 lakh shares), and SBI Capital Markets (53.62 lakh shares). Additional sellers include IFCI, HDFC Standard Life, Bajaj Holdings & Investment, and Bank of Baroda.

Valuation and Market Position

The timing of this filing is critical, as the NSE holds a near-monopoly in several key trading segments. Based on current unlisted market prices ranging between Rs 1,950 and Rs 2,050 per share, the NSE is valued at approximately Rs 5 lakh crore.

Market analysts suggest that while the exchange trades at a premium—near 45x FY26 earnings—it remains more attractively valued than its peers, such as BSE (trading near 70x) and MCX (trading near 80x). The resolution of the long-standing co-location controversy, which derailed the exchange's initial Rs 10,000-crore IPO attempt in 2016, has removed the primary regulatory overhang that previously suppressed its listing prospects.

Risks and Regulatory Headwinds

Despite the bullish sentiment, the exchange faces specific sectoral risks. Analysts have noted that NSE's earnings are heavily dependent on derivatives trading activity, which is inherently volatile. Furthermore, recent regulatory interventions by SEBI aimed at curbing retail participation in the futures and options (F&O) segment could impact trading volumes and, consequently, exchange revenues.

As the exchange prepares to deploy 20 merchant bankers for the issue, the market is watching closely to see if this IPO acts as a catalyst for a broader resurgence in India’s primary markets.

Key Takeaways