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Trimming the Sails: Indian IPOs Pivot To Smaller Issues Amid 2026 Primary Market Drought

With only 20 companies listing so far this year, a shift toward smaller issue sizes aims to revive cautious investor sentiment.

Trimming the Sails: Indian IPOs Pivot To Smaller Issues Amid 2026 Primary Market Drought
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Summary

Summary of this article

  • Indian firms are reducing IPO issue sizes to navigate cautious investor sentiment and ensure successful debuts amid 2026 market volatility.

  • Sebi now permits companies to trim issue sizes by up to 40% without refiling draft papers to accelerate listings before September 30, 2026.

  • Despite a slow start to the year, a robust pipeline of 146 approved companies suggests a primary market recovery as secondary conditions stabilize.

After a strong surge in 2025, the primary market is witnessing a drought in the number of initial public offerings (IPOs). In 2025, as many as 103 companies raised funds via public issues from the primary market. However, the situation looks drastically different in the current year, with only 20 companies raising funds so far as of the first week of May 2026.

Geopolitical Tensions and Market Volatility

The key reason behind this drop in momentum seems to be a change in investor sentiment. Investor sentiment has turned cautious amid the onset of the West-Asia crisis and its impact on the securities market. However, the IPO pipeline is likely to get a fresh boost as nearly 10 companies are now considering plans to reduce the size of their IPOs to float their public issues, according to a report by the Economic Times.

Antu Eapen Thomas, Senior Research Analyst, Geojit Investments told Outlook Money that investor preference is shifting towards fundamentally strong businesses with sustainable growth visibility.

“With only a limited number of year-to-date listings delivering meaningful listing gains, investor preference is shifting toward fundamentally strong businesses with sustainable growth visibility,” Thomas said.

Thomas added that,  ‘Recent undersubscription in retail portions highlights weakening appetite for IPOs with stretched valuations and weaker fundamentals’.

As of May 7, 2026, the Nifty and Sensex have delivered negative returns of 6.96 per cent and 8.62 per cent, respectively. However, the stock market witnessed a turnaround in April, as the benchmarks gave their best monthly performance in two years. In the month of April, the Nifty gained approximately 7.5 per cent, closing at 23,997.55, while the BSE Sensex gained approximately 6.9 per cent, settling at 76,913.50. This development is likely to revive investor sentiment regarding the stock market despite the negative year-to-date returns and prompt companies to tap the primary market for funds.

Strategic Downsizing and Regulatory Relief

The move to decrease the issue size is mainly on account of the relatively lower risk appetite of investors. It is likely that investor sentiment turning risk-averse has made investors more selective about what they invest in.

Notably, the capital market regulator, Securities Exchange Board of India (Sebi), has also helped companies in decreasing their issue size by allowing companies whose draft papers have been approved to reduce their issue size by up to 40 per cent without the need for refiling their papers. However, only those companies whose public issues are set to open before September 30, 2026, have the option to resize their offer size, provided their objectives remain unchanged. The provision was introduced earlier on April 15 through a Sebi circular. Traditionally, IPO-bound firms have had to refile a draft prospectus to trim the issue size by more than 20 per cent from the original estimate.

Sectoral Outlook and the IPO Pipeline

According to the report, several companies are currently trying to figure out whether institutional investors are interested in smaller-sized IPOs. The companies which are willing to reduce their issue size ahead of their IPO reportedly include companies within the non-banking finance companies (NBFC) sector, jewellery, food, packaging, healthcare and steel sectors.

These ten companies are expected to open their IPOs over the next two to four months, provided the secondary market remains stable. The flexible sizing becomes even more important for companies whose issue size is large, as they rely heavily on institutional participation, which tends to swing on the basis of the overall movement of the market.

It remains to be seen whether the deluge of IPOs seen in 2025 will return in 2026 and provide investors with multiple investment opportunities. However, the pipeline still looks solid as 146 companies have already been granted Sebi approval to raise more than Rs 2 lakh crore cumulatively. However, only 43 out of the 146 companies have approvals which are valid till September, according to Prime Database.

Thomas added that despite the dip in momentum, the IPO pipeline for 2026 is robust and the pragmatism adopted by IPO-bound firms in reducing their deal size is likely to help them in ensuring successful D-street debuts.

"India’s IPO pipeline for 2026 remains strong, though momentum has moderated in early 2026 amid volatile market conditions. Issuers are increasingly adopting a pragmatic approach by reducing deal sizes and moderating valuations to ensure successful listings,” Thomas said.

Thomas said that as the companies make their anticipated return to the primary market, clear earnings visibility, scalable business models, and reasonable valuations are expected to attract stronger investor interest amid volatile global macro conditions.

“Going forward, global macro conditions, Middle East geopolitical tensions, trade developments, and currency volatility will remain key sentiment drivers. In this backdrop, companies with clear earnings visibility, scalable business models, and reasonable valuations are likely to attract stronger investor interest," Thomas said.

Why are Indian companies reducing their IPO issue sizes in 2026? Companies are downsizing to adapt to cautious investor sentiment and lower risk appetite caused by geopolitical tensions and recent market volatility.

"What regulatory relief has SEBI provided to help companies adjust their IPOs?

Sebi now allows approved companies to reduce their issue size by up to 40% without refiling draft papers, provided the IPO opens before September 30, 2026.

What is the current outlook for the Indian IPO pipeline despite the slow start to the year?

The pipeline remains robust with 146 companies holding SEBI approval to raise over ₹2 lakh crore, though success depends on stable secondary market conditions and reasonable valuations.

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