The Indian primary market, once buzzing with oversized subscriptions and instant listing-day profits, is now showing a very different picture.
Many IPOs of 2025 have opened either with flat gains or, worse, in the red.
Despite strong investor enthusiasm during subscription periods, the excitement is fading quickly when the stock hits the exchange.
So what’s really happening and how can investors, especially retail participants, protect themselves?
The Reality Check: Why IPOs Are Opening in Losses or Flat
1. Aggressive Valuations at the Time of Issue
Many IPOs are being priced too high. Merchant bankers and promoters often push valuations beyond fair levels, expecting market sentiment to support them.
When the listing happens, the secondary market adjusts to reality and the price corrects downward.
2. Mismatch Between Hype and Fundamentals
Several of the new-age IPOs are from tech, fintech, EV, or consumer lifestyle sectors — exciting stories, but not always profitable ones.
Today’s market is far more mature. Investors are rewarding earnings and cash flows, not just “future potential.”
3. Weak Market Sentiment and Liquidity
Global factors, foreign fund outflows, and tighter liquidity have made investors cautious. When risk appetite falls, even fundamentally strong IPOs struggle for strong listings.
4. Anchor & Institutional Dynamics
Anchor investors, who take large pre-listing allocations, often exit soon after lock-in expiry.
If retail participation is limited, post-listing supply increases putting pressure on prices.
5. Misleading Grey Market Premiums (GMP)
GMPs are only unofficial indicators of sentiment, not fundamentals. Many investors blindly apply because of high GMPs, but it’s often manipulated or unsustainable.
Minimum Criteria to Judge a “Good IPO” Before Applying
Before applying for any IPO, investors should screen it using some key measurable filters.
Here’s a simple benchmark table to follow:
| Parameter | Minimum / Ideal Criteria | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Promoter Holding (Post-IPO) | At least 50–60% | Indicates promoters have strong skin in the game and long-term confidence. |
| Promoter Pledging | 0% or minimal (<5%) | Pledged shares can create pressure and risk of dilution. |
| Company Profitability | Consistent profit for minimum 2–3 years; positive EPS | Avoid loss-making companies unless growth visibility is exceptional. |
| Revenue Growth (3-Year CAGR) | >10–12% year-on-year | Shows sustainable top-line expansion. |
| Debt-to-Equity Ratio | Below 1.0 | Indicates balanced leverage and financial stability. |
| Return on Equity (ROE) | Above 12–15% | Measures profitability relative to shareholder equity. |
| Use of IPO Proceeds | At least 50% for growth/capex, not for promoter exit | Ensures raised funds are used for business expansion, not just encashment. |
| Valuation vs. Peers | P/E or EV/EBITDA within ±15% of industry average | Prevents overpaying for hype; helps find fairly priced issues. |
| Anchor / Institutional Participation | Strong QIB response (≥5x) with reputable institutional names | Signals confidence from long-term professional investors. |
| GMP (Grey Market Premium) | Use as a sentiment check only, not a decision factor | High GMP ≠ guaranteed listing gain; focus on fundamentals. |
| Promoter / Management Background | Clean corporate history, no SEBI action, consistent disclosure | Governance is a must; avoid questionable track records. |
| Listing Day Volume Expectation | Higher turnover = better liquidity | Avoid illiquid or SME IPOs unless you know the risk. |
What Every Individual Must Know Before Applying
Use these 5 checkpoints as a quick IPO investment filter:
- Profitability – Positive earnings and growth consistency.
- Valuation – Not overvalued vs peers.
- Promoter Confidence – High holding, low pledging.
- Business Clarity – Understand the revenue model.
- Long-Term Vision – IPO funds for growth, not promoter exit.
If 4 out of these 5 are met it’s generally a good IPO to consider.
Ideal IPO Strategy for Retail Investors
- Don’t apply in every IPO selectivity wins.
- Avoid loss-making companies with unclear roadmaps.
- Don’t rely on GMP or social media hype.
- Wait for 1–2 quarters post-listing before averaging in.
- Apply only with funds you can afford to hold long-term.
The Gujju Traders’ Lesson
Gujarat has given India some of its sharpest traders and investors known for their discipline, patience, and ability to value a business, not just the price.
As one old Ahmedabad trader once said,
“Listing gain is luck long-term gain is logic.”
Punchline:
“Be like a Gujju trader calculate before you speculate. IPO or no IPO, value always wins over vanity.”
In Summary
The Indian IPO market is evolving. The easy-money phase of “apply and sell on listing day” is over.
Today’s investors need to look beyond excitement and focus on profitability, promoter trust, and fair valuation.
When you pick the right IPO, you don’t just get a share you become a partner in a growing business.