Sood also welcomed SEBI’s decision to expand the anchor book to 40%, describing it as “a very, very welcome move.” The inclusion of life insurers and pension funds, alongside mutual funds whose one-third reservation remains intact, strengthens domestic investor participation. The allocation is also fungible, meaning if one category under-subscribes, others can step in, giving issuers greater flexibility.
He stated that India’s market structure is now far stronger than a decade ago, with average IPO sizes growing from $60–75 million to nearly $200 million. With this momentum and regulatory support, Sood believes the Indian market is positioned for the next wave of large IPOs worth $3–5 billion.
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(Edited by : Unnikrishnan)