An Initial Public Offering is the moment a private company steps into the public arena — selling shares to everyday investors for the very first time and joining a stock exchange.
$405B
Global IPO Capital Raised (2023)
750+
IPOs Completed Worldwide Annually
3–7%
Typical Underwriter Commission
3–5
Days Subscription Window Stays Open
📘 Core Definition
IPO (Initial Public Offering) is the process through which a private company offers its shares to the public for the first time, allowing investors to buy ownership stakes and enabling the company to raise capital from the broader market.
Once listed, the company's shares trade freely on a stock exchange — making the company "publicly traded."
💰
Raise Capital
Fund business expansion, R&D, new product lines, and operations — without taking on debt or relying on private investors alone.
📉
Reduce Debt
Use fresh capital raised from the IPO to pay off existing liabilities and improve the company's balance sheet strength.
🏆
Increase Brand Value
Public company status enhances credibility with customers, partners, and suppliers. Media attention boosts brand awareness.
🚪
Provide Exit for Founders
Early investors, venture capitalists, and founders can sell their private shares publicly and realize returns on years of hard work.
🌟
Attract Top Talent
Public companies can offer ESOPs (Employee Stock Option Plans) — equity compensation that attracts and retains world-class talent.
📊
Improve Transparency
Listed companies must publish audited financials quarterly — building trust with investors, analysts, and the public.
Company Journey: Private → Public
🏢 Private Company
→
📋 IPO Filed
→
🏛 SEBI Approval
→
📣 Shares Offered
→
📈 Listed on NSE/BSE
Aspect
Private Company
Public Company (Post-IPO)
Ownership
Founders, VCs, Angel investors
Any investor can buy shares
Capital Access
Limited to private funding rounds
Raises capital from public markets
Transparency
Financial info stays private
Must publish quarterly reports
Regulation
Minimal regulatory oversight
Subject to SEBI / SEC regulations
Liquidity
Shares cannot be easily sold
Shares freely traded on exchange
Valuation
Based on private deal negotiations
Determined by real-time market price
Step by Step
The IPO Process Explained
From a private company deciding to go public to its first day of trading — here is exactly how the IPO process works, step by step.
IPO Process Overview
Banker Selection
→
Due Diligence
→
SEBI Approval
→
Price Band
→
Subscription
→
Allotment
→
🚀 Listing Day
1
Hiring Investment Bankers (Underwriters)
The company selects one or more investment banks (like Goldman Sachs, Kotak, or SBI Capital) to manage the entire IPO. Underwriters handle documentation, legal filings, valuation, investor marketing, and risk management throughout the process.
Commission: 3–7% of Capital Raised
2
Due Diligence & Documentation (DRHP)
Bankers and legal teams conduct thorough financial audits and prepare the Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) — a detailed document disclosing financials, business strategy, risk factors, promoter backgrounds, and how IPO funds will be used.
Full Transparency Required by Law
3
SEBI Regulatory Review & Approval
The DRHP is submitted to SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India) for review. SEBI verifies all disclosures, checks for compliance violations, and grants approval before the company can approach public investors.
SEBI Review: 30–75 days typically
4
Roadshow & Investor Marketing
Company management and bankers conduct a roadshow — presenting the business to institutional investors (mutual funds, insurance companies, FIIs) across cities and countries to build interest and gauge demand before setting the price.
2–3 Weeks Duration Typically
5
Price Band Decision
Based on roadshow feedback, financials, and market conditions, the company and bankers agree on a price band (e.g., ₹200–₹220). Investors can bid at any price within this range during the subscription window.
Final Price: Determined Post-Subscription
6
Public Subscription Window Opens
The IPO opens for 3–5 days. Retail investors, high-net-worth individuals (HNIs), and qualified institutional buyers (QIBs) submit applications via ASBA or UPI through stockbroker apps like Zerodha, Groww, or bank portals.
Apply via ASBA or UPI Method
7
Allotment & Refunds
If oversubscribed, shares are allotted via lottery (retail) or pro-rata basis (HNI/QIB). Unsuccessful applicants receive refunds within 6 business days. Successful applicants receive shares in their Demat accounts.
Demat Credit: T+6 Days
8
Listing Day — Shares Begin Trading
On listing day, the stock makes its debut on NSE and BSE. The opening price is determined by pre-market demand. Investors watch for the listing gain — the difference between the issue price and the opening market price.
Listed on NSE & BSE India
💡 Key IPO Terms You Should Know
DRHP — Draft Red Herring Prospectus: the preliminary disclosure document filed with SEBI
Price Band — The lower and upper price range within which investors can bid
Cut-off Price — Bidding at whatever final price is determined (popular with retail investors)
Oversubscription — When demand exceeds shares available (e.g., 38× means 38 times more bids than shares)
Lock-in Period — Promoters cannot sell their shares for a set period post-IPO (typically 18 months)
Grey Market Premium (GMP) — Unofficial price at which IPO shares trade before listing
Case Studies
Real-World IPO Examples & Lessons
The best way to understand IPOs is through real stories — both the triumphs and cautionary tales that shaped how investors think about public offerings today.
🇮🇳
Zomato IPO (2021) — India's Digital Economy Milestone
Strong Listing
Zomato's IPO raised ₹9,375 crore and was oversubscribed 38 times overall, with retail participation breaking previous Indian records. The stock listed at a 53% premium over the issue price of ₹76 on its first day.
The IPO benefited from India's post-COVID digital acceleration, strong brand recognition, and a massive addressable market in food delivery and quick commerce.
📚 Lesson: Market timing, sector tailwinds, and investor confidence in a brand create powerful conditions for a successful IPO. However, Zomato's stock saw significant volatility in subsequent months as profitability concerns emerged — reminding investors that listing day gains don't guarantee long-term returns.
🌍
Facebook / Meta IPO (2012) — The Volatile Giant
Post-IPO Volatility
Facebook raised $16 billion in one of the largest tech IPOs ever at a price of $38 per share. Despite massive hype, the stock dropped 45% within three months, falling to around $17, due to concerns about mobile monetization and an overvalued offering price.
However, investors who held patiently saw extraordinary returns — the stock crossed $300+ years later as mobile advertising revenues exceeded all expectations.
📚 Lesson: High IPO valuations driven by hype can lead to near-term underperformance. Long-term business fundamentals — not opening-day excitement — determine actual investor returns.
🚀
Google IPO (2004) — The Smart Auction
Conservative Pricing
Google used a rare Dutch auction process to let the market determine the fair price, ultimately issuing at $85 per share. The conservative pricing disappointed some (many expected $130+) but created sustainable momentum — the stock ended Day 1 at ~$100.
Investors who bought at IPO and held would see returns of over 5,000% over the following two decades.
📚 Lesson: Conservative pricing + extraordinary business fundamentals = the most sustainable IPO story. Google's Dutch auction also democratized participation, reducing banker control over allocations.
⚠️
Reliance Power IPO (2008) — The Cautionary Tale
Long-Term Losses
Reliance Power's IPO was oversubscribed 73 times — a record at the time — raising ₹11,700 crore. The hype was extraordinary. Yet within months, the stock was trading below its issue price due to project delays, regulatory hurdles, and execution failures.
Investors who bought at the IPO and held for years faced losses exceeding 90% of their investment — one of India's most painful IPO lessons.
📚 Lesson: Oversubscription numbers and initial hype are NOT indicators of business quality. Always evaluate the actual business model, promoter track record, and realistic revenue projections before investing.
📊 The Golden Rule of IPO Investing
IPO success depends on business fundamentals, execution capability, sector tailwinds, and fair valuation — never on hype, oversubscription numbers, or celebrity endorsements alone. Read the DRHP carefully before investing.
IPO
Year
Amount Raised
1st Day
Long-Term Outcome
Zomato
2021
₹9,375 Cr
+53%
Volatile — ongoing profitability journey
Facebook / Meta
2012
$16 Billion
–0.6%
Extraordinary long-term returns
Google
2004
$1.67 Billion
+18%
5,000%+ returns over 20 years
Reliance Power
2008
₹11,700 Cr
+20%
90%+ loss from IPO price
Paytm
2021
₹18,300 Cr
–27%
Severe underperformance post-listing
Test Yourself
IPO Knowledge Quiz
Put your understanding to the test. Click each question to reveal the correct answer and explanation.
Q1. What does IPO stand for? ▾
A) Internal Profit Option
B) Initial Public Offering
C) Investment Public Order
D) Index Price Output
Q2. What is the primary purpose of an IPO? ▾
A) To reduce employee salaries
B) To raise capital from public investors
C) To increase company debt
D) To eliminate market competition
Q3. Who manages the IPO process on behalf of the company? ▾
A) Government agencies
B) Investment banks (underwriters)
C) Insurance companies
D) Accounting firms only
Q4. What is the regulatory body overseeing IPOs in India? ▾
A) RBI — Reserve Bank of India
B) SEBI — Securities and Exchange Board of India
C) IRDA — Insurance Regulatory Authority
D) Ministry of Finance
Q5. What is a price band in an IPO? ▾
A) The company's stock market ranking
B) A random price assigned by SEBI
C) The range within which investors can bid for shares
D) The price after listing day closes
Q6. How was the Zomato IPO of 2021 oversubscribed? ▾
A) 5 times
B) 15 times
C) 38 times
D) 100 times
Q7. What special pricing method did Google use for its 2004 IPO? ▾
A) Fixed price method
B) Dutch auction
C) Government lottery
D) Open bidding war
Q8. What does DRHP stand for? ▾
A) Daily Revenue Holding Plan
B) Draft Red Herring Prospectus
C) Dividend Reinvestment Holding Policy
D) Demat Record Holdings Profile
Q9. What determines long-term IPO investment success? ▾
A) Media hype and celebrity endorsements
B) First-day listing gains alone
C) Business fundamentals, execution, and sector growth
D) Amount of oversubscription
Q10. How can retail investors apply for an IPO in India? ▾
A) Only through physical bank branches
B) Via ASBA or UPI through stockbroker apps or net banking
C) Only through institutional investors
D) By contacting SEBI directly
🎯 Bonus Facts
The largest IPO in history was Saudi Aramco (2019) — raising $25.6 billion in one offering.
India's LIC IPO (2022) was the largest ever in India, raising ₹20,557 crore.
After listing, retail investors must wait for the T+1 settlement to sell their allotted IPO shares.
The grey market premium (GMP) before listing can give a rough indication of expected listing gains — but is unofficial and unregulated.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
Answers to the most searched questions about IPOs — from absolute beginners to aspiring investors looking to apply for their first IPO in India.
What is an IPO in simple words?+
In simple terms, an IPO is when a private company sells its shares to the general public for the very first time. Before the IPO, only founders, employees, and private investors like venture capitalists own pieces of the company. After the IPO, anyone — including everyday investors — can buy shares and own a portion of the business. The company gets listed on a stock exchange like NSE or BSE, where shares can then be freely bought and sold.
How does the IPO process work in India?+
The IPO process in India follows these key steps:
Company hires investment bankers (underwriters) to manage the process
Detailed financial disclosure document (DRHP) is prepared and filed with SEBI
SEBI reviews and grants approval (typically 30–75 days)
Roadshows are held to market the IPO to institutional investors
Price band is announced and subscription opens for 3–5 days
Shares are allotted; unsuccessful applicants get refunds within 6 days
Shares are listed on NSE and BSE for public trading
What is SEBI's role in an IPO?+
SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India) is the primary market regulator that oversees all IPOs in India. Its key roles include:
Reviewing the DRHP to ensure all material information is fully disclosed
Protecting retail investor interests from fraudulent or misleading offerings
Ensuring the company meets all eligibility criteria for listing
Granting final approval before a company can accept public subscriptions
Investigating any violations or market manipulation post-listing
Without SEBI approval, no company can launch a public IPO in India.
Is investing in an IPO a good idea?+
IPOs can offer good investment opportunities, but they carry significant risks. Here's an honest breakdown:
Potential upside: Early access to high-growth companies at a fixed issue price before market-driven trading begins
Risks: IPO prices can be overvalued; post-listing volatility is common; the company lacks a public track record
Key advice: Always read the DRHP carefully, evaluate the business model and financials, avoid investing based on hype or GMP alone, and never invest money you cannot afford to lock up
Past IPOs like Reliance Power and Paytm show that even heavily hyped IPOs can deliver long-term losses.
What is a price band in an IPO?+
A price band is the range within which investors can place their bids for IPO shares. For example, if the price band is ₹200–₹220, you can bid at any price between ₹200 and ₹220. Retail investors often choose the "cut-off price" option, meaning they agree to pay whatever the final issue price is determined to be. The final price is set after the subscription closes, based on overall demand from all investor categories.
What is oversubscription in an IPO and what does it mean?+
Oversubscription happens when the total number of shares applied for exceeds the shares available. For example:
If 1 crore shares are available and investors apply for 38 crore shares, the IPO is 38× oversubscribed
High oversubscription signals strong investor demand and confidence in the company
However, it does NOT guarantee a strong listing or long-term gains (see: Reliance Power was 73× oversubscribed)
When oversubscribed, allotment for retail investors happens via lottery — not everyone who applied will receive shares
What is the difference between an IPO and an FPO?+
IPO (Initial Public Offering): The first time a private company sells shares to the public. The company was previously unlisted on any stock exchange.
FPO (Follow-on Public Offering): When a company that is already listed on a stock exchange issues additional new shares to raise more capital from the public. The company already has a trading history that investors can evaluate.
In simple terms: IPO = first sale ever. FPO = second (or subsequent) public share sale.
How can I apply for an IPO in India?+
To apply for an IPO in India, you need:
A Demat account (with brokers like Zerodha, Groww, Upstox, Angel One)
A PAN card linked to your Demat account
A bank account linked via UPI or ASBA
Application methods:
UPI method: Apply through your broker's app → enter UPI ID → approve mandate in your UPI app (BHIM, PhonePe, Google Pay)
ASBA method: Apply through your bank's net banking portal under the IPO section — funds stay in your account until allotment
The minimum application is typically 1 lot (usually worth ₹10,000–₹15,000 depending on the IPO).
Master IPOs & Invest with Confidence
Understanding how IPOs work — from the process and pricing to real-world examples — gives you a massive edge as an investor. Never chase hype; always research the business. LearnEdition is here to help you make informed financial decisions.