India is gearing up for two of the most anticipated initial public offerings in its modern economic history, with Jio Platforms and the National Stock Exchange (NSE) both targeting listings before the end of 2026. Industry analysts describe the dual offerings as potentially transformative events that could redefine the trajectory of the country’s capital markets, reflecting a decade of sweeping structural change across how India lives, works, invests and consumes.
The two firms submitted their draft IPO prospectuses within days of each other last month, kicking off the formal approval process for the listings. Reliance Industries, the conglomerate controlled by Indian billionaire Mukesh Ambani, owns Jio Platforms, the digital and telecom arm that sparked a nationwide digital revolution after its 2016 launch. Jio is projected to raise approximately $4 billion through the offering, with a total estimated valuation ranging between $120 billion and $160 billion. For the NSE, the world’s largest derivatives exchange and one of the top three equity venues globally by trading volume, the IPO will sell a 6% equity stake to raise around $3.3 billion, valuing the exchange at $57 billion.
Yatin Singh, chief executive officer of investment banking at Emkay Global, explained that the scale and significance of these offerings extend far beyond their sheer size. Even at their current valuations, the combined listings will lift India’s overall national market capitalization considerably, but their real meaning lies in what they represent: a tangible reflection of the massive shifts that have reshaped India’s economy over the past 10 years. “These are unique businesses which don’t get built often,” Singh noted. “NSE is a direct proxy of the ‘financialisation’ of Indian household savings into mutual funds and stocks, while Jio is the story of a company that single handedly ushered in a digital revolution, becoming a driving factor for several new-age Indian businesses.” He compared the potential impact of the listings to the landmark software company IPOs that reshaped Indian markets decades ago.
Jio’s disruptive entry into India’s crowded telecom sector in 2016 redefined the entire industry overnight. Offering nearly free data to hundreds of millions of first-time internet users, it triggered a brutal price war that consolidated a fragmented market of 17 operators into a near-duopoly. Ten years ago, fewer than 200 million Indians had access to the internet; today, that figure is approaching 1 billion, with Jio alone claiming 525 million subscribers who use its network for everything from digital payments to online shopping and streaming entertainment. Thanks to Jio’s low-cost tariffs that democratized smartphone access, India is now the world’s largest consumer of mobile data, outpacing developed markets including the United States and China.
This digital transformation has rewoven the fabric of daily economic life in India. Launched the same year as Jio, the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) real-time payment system grew from processing near-zero transactions to 228 billion annual transactions by 2025, according to brokerage firm Zerodha. Between 2019 and 2026, paid subscribers to over-the-top streaming platforms rose 40%, and Kotak Bank research shows Indian households’ monthly mobile data bills have tripled – growing three times faster than rural wages – as consumers spend more time on video streaming and social media. Today, Jio is evolving beyond its core telecom roots, positioning itself as a homegrown digital and artificial infrastructure giant through strategic partnerships with global tech leaders Nvidia and Meta to build domestic data centers and large language models trained on Indian languages. Elara Securities notes the firm is now shifting from market share acquisition to active monetization, driven by gradual tariff increases, rising data consumption, and growth in higher-value postpaid plans – a trend that signals India’s consumer market is maturing rapidly.
The NSE’s growth trajectory, meanwhile, tracks the explosion of retail investing that has swept India in recent years. When the pandemic locked millions of households at home, a wave of first-time mom-and-pop investors entered the stock market, fueled by the widespread availability of cheap mobile data and affordable smartphones. The total number of active online trading accounts surged from roughly 30 million before the pandemic to more than 200 million today. The NSE now serves as the core backbone of India’s $4.85 trillion stock market, which ranks as the fourth largest in the world by total capitalization. The exchange generates revenue from every trade executed on its platform, and has delivered consistently strong profits even as trading volumes fluctuate with market conditions. After years of delays caused by a series of governance hurdles, its upcoming IPO signals the maturing of India’s market infrastructure and the broadening of its investor base, according to Feroze Azeez of Anand Rathi Wealth Limited.
Azeez summed up the broader significance of the dual listings, saying “Together, Jio and NSE represent the twin pillars of India’s new economy.” The simultaneous offerings are expected to expand India’s investable universe for global capital, giving foreign investors direct access to two sectors that are central to India’s long-term growth narrative. However, industry experts remain divided on whether the IPOs will be enough to reverse the recent outflow of foreign capital from Indian markets. Over the past year, Indian equities have been among the worst-performing major markets globally, as foreign investors pulled billions of dollars out of the country to chase higher interest rates in the U.S. and AI-focused investment opportunities elsewhere in Asia. A depreciating rupee has further eroded India’s appeal for overseas investors.
Domestic investor confidence has also been shaken in recent years, after many small retail investors suffered losses on high-profile IPOs from major domestic firms including PayTM and Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC). Dozens of other recent large IPOs are currently trading below their initial listing prices, leaving many households wary of new offerings. Analysts agree that the final success of the Jio and NSE IPOs will hinge entirely on their pricing. “Even high-quality businesses can deliver disappointing returns if they are issued at overly aggressive valuations,” Azeez noted.
