Prior to the IPO, the price of this stock was running up by Rs 125 in the gray market, that is, it was expected that the listing would benefit up to 16 percent. But the listing was not as strong, yet the bounce that came in two days gave some relief to the investors.
NSDL Share Price: Investors interested in tremendous
This IPO of NSDL was a total of Rs 4012 crore, which was completely offer for sale (offs). This means that the company did not raise any new money from it, but the current shareholders sold some of their shares. Even after the listing, the promoters remained 20 crore shares.
Investors’ interest was also tremendous. The entire IPO was subscribed at 41.02 times. The highest interest was shown by qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBS) who subscribed to 103.97 times, followed by non-institutional investors (34.98 times) and then retail investors (7.76 times). Prior to the IPO, Rs 1201.44 crore was raised from anchor investors, which makes the trust of institutional investors clear.
NSDL Share Price: What does the company do
The NSDL started in 2012 and is a SEBI -recognized market infrastructure institution (MII). It is the main institution to handle the process of demat accounts and share transactions in India. Its services include demat account, trade settlement, e-voting, corporate action and consolidated account statement. As of March 2025, NSDL had 3.94 crore active demat accounts, which are operated through 294 depository partners.
NSDL has two subsidiary companies – NSDL Database Management and NSDL Payments Bank. Both these companies work in e-governance and digital financial services. In FY25, the company earned an annual increase of 12 per cent to Rs 1,535.19 crore and the profit increased by 25 per cent to Rs 343.12 crore.
NSDL Share Price: What to do now investors?
According to the wealth head of Swastika Investmart, Shivani Nayati, the company has been strong and it is preparing to provide more value-added services in the future. The company has shown a continuous increase in financial performance and its role is important in the Indian capital market.
Now the question is, what should investors do? Experts recommend that some part of the initial profit that has been received should be booked, but instead of selling all the shares, you can also hold some parts. Stoploss can be kept close to Rs 850. Because the company’s business is strong and its services are continuously increasing, it can go up further in the long term. Nevertheless, it is necessary to balance between short -term and long -term thinking.
Prashant Tapse, Senior Vice President (Research Analyst) at Mehta Equities Limited, said, “NSDL Value-Based Transaction and Institutional Account Holdings are constantly ahead in holdings. The reason is that the industry trusts it and strong technology system. CDSL. It has been difficult for new players to take entry. ”
Saurabh Jain, head of Equity Research (Fundamentals) in SMC Global Securities, said, “NSDL dominated the market, covering big service networks and different types of assets keeps it in good condition for long-term growth. It is also behind the strong economy and regulatory support of the country.”