Why companies in India are delaying their IPOs amid tensions in West Asia

/6 min read
Amid an escalating war in the Middle East, India’s red-hot IPO pipeline faces a reality check, forcing companies to rethink timing, pricing, and ambition.
Why companies in India are delaying their IPOs amid tensions in West Asia
While the pipeline remains robust on paper, issuers are adopting a more cautious stance — revisiting valuations, trimming issue sizes, and, in some cases, pressing pause altogether, analysts say. Credits: Anirban Ghosh

ESCALATING GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS in the Middle East, coupled with volatile equity markets and persistent foreign institutional outflows, have begun to weigh on the primary market activity in one of the world’s busiest IPO markets — India. The recent decisions by digital payments major PhonePe and logistics firm Skyways Air Services to defer their public issues signal a broader shift. Several other new-age companies, including Zepto, boAt, Acko, Turtlemint, Flipkart, and OYO are also understood to be recalibrating their listing plans as institutional investors turn increasingly selective.