Young, loss-making startups keep OFS portion lean as investor scrutiny grows

Young, loss-making startups keep OFS portion lean as investor scrutiny grows



Young, loss-making startups preparing for initial public offerings (IPOs) are increasingly keeping the fresh issue component large to fund their growth plans as investors grow wary of large shareholder exits from companies that still require capital to scale and turn profitable, according to experts.

Quick commerce platform Zepto’s proposed Rs 8,010-crore fresh issue is the latest example of this. It follows similar moves by Ola Electric and PhysicsWallah, whose offer for sale (OFS) portions were about 10-11% of their IPOs.

In the case of Curefoods, which filed for a Rs 800-crore fresh issue, the value of its OFS will depend on the final pricing. The company, however, has put its IPO plans on hold amid market choppiness.

These companies have listed, filed or tested IPO plans within five to seven years of founding.

This is different from the 2021-22 startup listing cycle, when the market was still opening up to new-age companies and was more accepting of large secondary share sales.

An ET analysis of more than 40 venture-backed and new-age firms shows that seven of the 10 new-age IPOs in 2021-22 had an OFS component of more than 50%. The median OFS share in that cohort was about 80%.