Representative image / Pexels
India’s public markets are awash in fresh equity, yet very little of it is funding actual expansion. Companies filing for IPOs this fiscal plan to raise ₹1.82 lakh crore, but only about 16–17 percent of that total is slated for capital expenditure—a strikingly thin investment pipeline beneath a record-breaking issuance boom. The rest is split between shareholder exits, debt repayment and routine expenses, raising uncomfortable questions about how productively India’s hottest capital-raising cycle in years is being used.
The volume of activity is undeniably impressive. In the first seven months of the fiscal year alone, public-market fund-raising totalled ₹1.25 lakh crore across offerings, riding on the back of an all-time-high ₹2.11 lakh crore in FY25. Across the five years through FY25, issuances touched ₹5.66 lakh crore—more than the entire 15-year period between FY05 and FY20. Investor sentiment has been turbocharged by a 123 percent cumulative return on the NIFTY over the past five years, double the market’s pace in the preceding decade.
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