Two of India's most anticipated stock market listings, Reliance Jio and the National Stock Exchange, are finally edging toward reality. But the market they will enter looks very different from the one that greeted Maruti Suzuki's landmark IPO, and the comparison raises a fair question: can mega listings still move the needle for Indian markets and foreign investors?
The broader backdrop is a global IPO calendar heating up fast. In the US, AI-driven companies including OpenAI and Anthropic are preparing to tap public markets, riding a wave of investor enthusiasm around artificial intelligence. Bankers and analysts watching that pipeline see a familiar pattern: high-profile listings that arrive at or near a market peak, driven more by hype cycles than by underlying earnings momentum.
India's IPO Moment Is Different
India's situation is more complicated. The Jio and NSE IPOs have been anticipated for years, and that long wait has itself become part of the story. Indian markets have delivered relatively flat returns over a stretch long enough to dull retail excitement and cool foreign institutional appetite. The frenzied subscription multiples that greeted some earlier Indian listings are unlikely to repeat in the current environment.
That sobriety, however, may not be a disadvantage. A more measured reception would force both issuers to price sensibly, which in turn creates a more durable post-listing performance curve. Maruti's IPO in 2003 is the reference point here precisely because it arrived in a low-expectations environment and went on to generate exceptional long-run returns for shareholders. The analogy is not about hype but about timing relative to sentiment cycles.
Jio, the telecom and digital services arm of Reliance Industries, would be among the largest listings in Indian stock market history by any measure. Its subscriber base, bundled service ecosystem, and the sheer weight of the Reliance balance sheet behind it give it a profile unlike any recent Indian IPO. NSE, the exchange operator, is a structurally profitable business with near-monopoly characteristics in equity derivatives trading, one of the highest-volume segments in global markets.
What Foreign Investors Are Watching
Foreign portfolio investors have been selective about India in recent years, rotating in and out based on currency moves, valuation gaps versus other emerging markets, and domestic policy signals. A credible, well-priced Jio IPO could serve as a re-entry trigger for funds that have underweighted India. Large anchor blocks in a landmark listing tend to pull in passive and benchmark-tracking money as well, creating a compounding inflow effect beyond the IPO itself.
The NSE listing carries a different kind of significance. An exchange going public on its own platform is both symbolic and structurally meaningful. It would give price discovery to an institution that sits at the center of Indian financial infrastructure, and it would add a new category of financial sector stock to global emerging market indices over time.
The risk in drawing the Maruti parallel too tightly is that it can encourage wishful thinking. Maruti succeeded not just because sentiment was low at listing, but because the underlying business compounded strongly over the following decade. Whether Jio's revenue mix and margin profile, or NSE's regulatory and governance history, can support a similar long arc of value creation is a separate question that IPO pricing alone cannot answer.
What the current setup does offer is a possible reset point. If US IPOs, particularly AI-linked ones, disappoint post-listing and dampen global risk appetite, India's more grounded offerings could look relatively attractive. Investors burned by overpriced listings elsewhere tend to migrate toward markets where valuation discipline was maintained. That shift would benefit Indian markets broadly, not just the two IPOs themselves.
For now, both listings remain in preparation rather than confirmed with dates or price bands. The next concrete signals to watch are regulatory filings with SEBI, anchor investor conversations, and any guidance from Reliance Industries management on Jio's listing timeline.