When a company raises funds through an initial public offer (IPO), it can either issue new shares or allow existing shareholders to sell a portion of their stake. Let’s take a look at some of the recent IPOs. The Rs 1,069 crore IPO of Bharat Coking Coal, that came out in January 2026, was an offer for sale (OFS), which means the proceeds went to exiting shareholders. On the other hand, PNGS Reva Diamond Jewellery’s Rs 380 crore IPO in February 2026 was a fresh issue, which means funds raised went directly to the company. However, many companies opt for a mix of both. Understanding the difference between a fresh issue and an OFS can help investors see what the company wants to achieve from its offering.
What Is a Fresh Issue?
A fresh issue involves the company issuing new equity shares through an IPO.
Fund Flow: The proceeds from the issue go directly to the company and increase its paid-up share capital. For example, issuing 10 million shares at Rs 300 each raises Rs 300 crore for the company.
Share Capital Impact: The total number of outstanding shares increases after the issue.
Dilution: Existing shareholders’ percentage holding declines because new shares are added to the equity base.
Objective: The funds raised from a fresh issue are typically used for expansion, capital expenditure, repayment of debt, acquisitions, or working capital requirements.
What Is an Offer for Sale?
An offer for sale involves existing shareholders, such as promoters, private equity funds, or early investors, selling their full stake in the company or a part of it.
Fund Flow: The proceeds go directly to the exiting shareholders. If 10 million shares are sold at Rs 150 each, the Rs 150 crore raised goes to them.
Share Capital Impact: The company’s share capital remains unchanged since no new equity is issued.
Dilution: There’s no dilution. Only the ownership structure changes as public investors replace a portion of earlier shareholders.
Objective: It is used to reduce promoter holding, meet shareholding norms, or provide an exit to financial investors.
Why the Distinction Matters
The mix between fresh issue and offer for sale usually tells investors what the objective of the IPO is really about.
If the fresh issue portion is larger, the company is likely raising fund for expansion or to cut debt.
If the offer for sale dominates, existing shareholders are using the IPO to monetise their stake.
Investors should closely track promoter holding before and after the issue, the stated use of proceeds, and how the capital structure changes post listing.
This distinction allows investors to ignore headline valuation and understand what the IPO actually does for the business. Assess if it’s strengthening the balance sheet and supporting future growth, or simply changing the shareholding mix.














