The Indian government's offer for sale in Indian Railway Finance Corporation (IRFC) opens for retail investors today, June 28, 2026, with a floor price of Rs 91 per share. The total OFS is sized at Rs 2,212 crore, making it one of the more notable public sector disinvestment transactions of the current calendar year.
The OFS had already opened for institutional investors in an earlier tranche, and that portion was oversubscribed, a signal that large funds found the floor price acceptable relative to IRFC's fundamentals and near-term outlook. Retail investors now get their window, typically at a marginal discount to the floor price under standard OFS rules for non-institutional participants.
How an OFS Works
An offer for sale is a stock exchange mechanism through which an existing shareholder, in this case the Indian government, sells shares it already holds directly to investors on the exchange platform. No fresh equity is created, so the capital raised goes entirely to the seller, here the government, rather than to IRFC itself. The company's operations, borrowing program, and balance sheet are unaffected by the transaction.
The floor price of Rs 91 sets the minimum at which bids are accepted. Retail investors can place bids at or above that level, and allotment typically happens at the price that clears demand. The greenshoe option included in this OFS allows the government to sell additional shares beyond the base size if demand warrants it, potentially pushing total proceeds above the headline Rs 2,212 crore figure.
Institutional oversubscription heading into the retail day is generally a supportive signal. It suggests the floor price is not seen as stretched, and it reduces the risk that retail bids are left chasing an unfilled book. That said, secondary market prices on the day of an OFS can drift toward or below the floor price as arbitrage traders manage positions.
Why IRFC and Why Now
IRFC is the dedicated financing arm of Indian Railways, borrowing from capital markets to on-lend exclusively to the Ministry of Railways. Its business model carries near-zero credit risk by design, since its sole borrower is a sovereign-backed entity. That predictability has made IRFC attractive to long-duration fixed-income and dividend-oriented equity investors.
The government's disinvestment calendar for 2026 has included a series of OFS transactions across public sector undertakings. Selling down stakes through OFS is faster and operationally simpler than a fresh public issue, requires no SEBI prospectus approval for a new offer, and allows the government to raise funds while keeping the company listed and majority-owned. The Department of Investment and Public Asset Management (DIPAM) has been the nodal agency managing these transactions.
For the government, proceeds from PSU stake sales contribute to non-tax revenue targets and help manage the fiscal deficit without raising debt. The pace of OFS activity this year reflects continued pressure to meet disinvestment targets within the fiscal calendar.
For retail investors, the practical consideration is straightforward: the floor price of Rs 91 sets a known entry ceiling, and the oversubscription by institutions provides some early validation of valuation. However, investors should note that IRFC's share price in the secondary market may trade close to or below Rs 91 on the day of the OFS, which affects the effective discount or premium at which retail participants are buying.
Post-allotment, the government's reduced stake percentage will be publicly disclosed, giving markets a clearer picture of how much further disinvestment headroom remains in IRFC. Watch for the final subscription figures and greenshoe exercise decision, both of which will indicate whether total proceeds exceed the base Rs 2,212 crore.