Small IPOs face listing delays as mutual funds turn selective amid broader market volatilities
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories.Mumbai: Large mutual funds in India are becoming more selective about investing in smaller stock market listings, making companies that seek to raise between ₹400 crore to ₹2,000 crore either wait out a volatile market or turn to private equity and venture capital firms for funds.“There is clearly more selectivity. In the ₹2,000–3,000 crore range, deals need sharper differentiation on growth, quality, and valuation to see strong traction,” said Raghav Gupta, joint chief executive officer, IIFL Capital.
He added that there is rising participation from family offices, high networth individual/ ultrahigh networth individual (HNIs/UHNI) investors, and alternative investment funds (AIFs) while select global long-only investors continue to back mid-sized, high-quality stories.The shift is changing the primary market landscape. Domestic institutional investors (DIIs), led by mutual funds, are showing increased preference for bigger, more liquid deals and leaving a growing pile of mid-sized initial public offering (IPO) filings in limbo.“Larger mutual fund AUMs (assets under management) naturally gravitate towards bigger, more liquid deals, while recent volatility has made investors more valuation conscious.
The bar has gone up, not the appetite gone down,” Gupta said, adding that some companies are exploring private capital either as a bridge or an alternative to IPOs. “This is opening up attractive opportunities for PE/VC (private equity/ venture capital) players to deploy capital in quality businesses.”Backed by relentless Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) inflows and deeper participation in anchor books, DIIs are exerting far greater discipline on valuations than during the 2021 IPO cycle, M
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