Unlisted Shares & Pre-IPO Investing

Introduction

Unlisted shares represent ownership in private companies whose shares do not trade on public exchanges. Pre-IPO investing means buying shares before the company lists publicly. These can deliver high returns if the company later lists at a higher valuation—but liquidity and risk profiles are very different from listed securities.

Why investors pursue unlisted/pre-IPO shares

  • Early access to growth: Potential for outsized returns if the company scales and lists.
  • Diversification: Adds private-company exposure to a public-securities portfolio.
  • Unique opportunities: Some high-growth startups raise private capital at attractive stages.

Key risks

  • Illiquidity: No ready secondary market; selling can be difficult or require a long wait.
  • Valuation opacity: Pricing is negotiated or based on infrequent private rounds.
  • Regulatory & governance risk: Less disclosure than listed companies.
  • Concentration risk: High exposure to single-company performance.

How unlisted share deals typically work

  • Primary round: Company issues new shares to raise capital.
  • Secondary transaction: Existing shareholders sell shares to new investors.
  • Dedicated platforms/brokers may facilitate peer-to-peer transfers subject to platform rules & approvals.

Valuation methods used in practice

  • Comparable multiples: Apply P/E, EV/Revenue multiples from listed peers.
  • Discounted Cash Flow (DCF): Project cash flows and discount to present value (sensitive to inputs).
  • Recent transaction pricing: Use price from the latest financing round as a reference.

Due diligence checklist

  1. Cap table & share class rights (prefer common, check for preferential rights).
  2. Financial statements & growth metrics (revenue, margins, unit economics).
  3. Use of proceeds & runway (how long the capital sustains operations).
  4. Founder background and governance (board composition, investor protections).
  5. Exit strategy & liquidity options (promoter buyback, planned IPO timeline).
  6. Legal documents (share purchase agreement, lock-in, transfer restrictions).

Pricing & exit mechanics

  • Lock-in periods are common.
  • Secondary buyers often request valuation discounts for illiquidity.
  • Exit may come as: IPO, strategic buyout, or secondary market sale to investors.

Practical example (hypothetical)

An investor buys 1,000 shares at ₹1,000 in a private round (invested ₹10 lakh). If the company lists later at a valuation where per-share market price is ₹5,000, the position value becomes ₹50 lakh (5x gain), minus taxes and fees.

But if listing is delayed or the company falters, returns can be negative or capital can be locked for years.

Regulatory considerations

  • Ensure transactions are routed through SEBI-compliant intermediaries where required.
  • KYC, tax implications, and reporting must be adhered to—consult a tax advisor for capital gains treatment.