IPOs

Introduction

An Initial Public Offering (IPO) is a company’s first sale of shares to the public. It transforms a private company into a publicly listed company and raises capital for growth, debt repayment, acquisitions or brand building.

Why companies go public

  • Raise fresh capital.
  • Provide liquidity and exit to early investors.
  • Enhance brand and governance visibility.

Typical IPO timeline & steps

  1. Appointment of advisors: Merchant bankers, legal counsels, auditors.
  2. Preparation of DRHP (Draft Red Herring Prospectus): Detailed disclosure of finances, risk factors, use of proceeds. Filed with SEBI (India).
  3. SEBI review & approval: DRHP scrutiny; comments addressed.
  4. Roadshows/marketing: Company & bankers market the issue to institutional investors.
  5. Price discovery / Book building: Price band is set and institutional bids determine final price in book-built issues.
  6. Subscription by investors: Retail, HNI, QIBs apply via ASBA/UPI (retail).
  7. Allotment: Shares allotted as per rules—oversubscription may lead to proportionate allotment or lottery for retail.
  8. Listing: Shares begin trading on NSE/BSE at listing price (which may differ from issue price).

How retail investors apply (India — common method)

  • Use ASBA via netbanking or UPI. The application amount remains blocked in the bank account until allotment. After allotment and debit, shares are credited to your demat.

How allotment works (simplified)

  • Suppose the retail portion is oversubscribed 10x — a retail applicant’s probability of allotment reduces and allocation may be proportionate or via lottery for small lots. The final allotment depends on subscription and the company’s allotment policy.

Should retail investors apply?

IPOs can be attractive but are not guaranteed winners. Research the company fundamentals, growth prospects, valuation vs peers, and subscription levels. Avoid FOMO.

Post-IPO basics

  • Lock-in for pre-IPO investors: Often earlier investors and promoters have a lock-in period.
  • Listing volatility: Expect price fluctuations—day-one pops are possible, but so are significant dips.