Friday, 10 July 2026

Indian QIP & Preferential Issue Tracker 10Jul2026

Indian QIP & Preferential Issue Tracker 10Jul2026 

 

 


(This is my 525th blog since 2010. Over the years, I have covered global financial markets, with a focus on India, and continue to share insights to help readers understand complex topics in simple language.

The views expressed here are for information purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation or investment advice. While the author is a CFA Charterholder with nearly 25 years of experience in financial markets, this content is intended to share general insights and does not constitute financial guidance. 

Please consult your financial adviser before taking any investment decision. Safe to assume the author has a vested interest in stocks / investments discussed if any.) 

  

This is just data for information purpose only >

This blog tracks equity fundraising by listed Indian companies through Qualified Institutional Placements (QIPs) and Preferential Issues (Preferential Allotments). It is maintained as a continually updated reference covering key developments, including announcements, approvals, pricing, allotments and related disclosures. 

The latest updates appear at the top of the page.

This tracker is intended solely for information and educational purposes. Readers should refer to official stock exchange filings and company disclosures for authoritative information.

 

-----------------------------

Previous references:
 
Check the blog "Indian Economy Data Bank 13Jun2024"  for updates on QIP funds raised by India Ince in the same blog >

Update 28Apr2026 with chart 125
Update 02Dec2025 with Chart 92
Update 16Dec2024 with Chart 29
 
Tweet thread 28Apr2026 on QIPs (starts from 29Nov2024)
Tweet thread 19Jan2024 on QIPs (starts fro
 
-----------------------------
 

Update 10Jul2026 

 

Difference between QIP and prefential issue of equity shares:

Preferential Issue: The company picks specific, named investors—which can be anyone from promoters (the founders), strategic partners, a specific private equity fund or even a couple of high net worth individuals (HNIs).

In a preferential allottment, there will a be a lock in period of 6 to 18 months, depending on the type of investor. It's a slower process versus a QIP. 

QIP: The company targets only institutional investors—known as Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs) like mutual funds, foreign portfolio investors (FPIs), pension funds, banks and insurance companies. 

Retail investors or founders cannot participate in a QIP. With QIP, there is no lock-in period. The process is much faster compared to a preferential allotment. Under QIP, a discount of up to 5 per cent on the floor price  is allowed for investors. 

 

Update 10Jul2026 

 

As of 10Jul2026, companies that have already raised are in the process of raising equity capital via QIP during FY 2026-27, as per BSE data, are:

Ideaforge Technology
Blue Jet Healthcare
Adani Enterprises
Manorama Industries
Sterlite Technologies
TANFAC Industries
JSW Infrastructure
Krishna Institute of Medical Sciences
Craftsman Automation
Indus Infra Trust
Motisons Jewellers
Aanchal Ispat
ACME Solar Holdings
Ola Electric Mobility
KRN Heat Exchanger And Refrigeration
JSW Energy
Afcom Holdings
Brookfield India Real Estate Trust REIT
Poonawalla Fincorp

As of 31May2026, India Inc raised Rs 59,298 crore from 265 preferential issues during FY 2026-27, as per Prime Database. 


 

As of 30Jun2026, India Inc raised Rs 38,840 crore from 16 QIP issues during FY 2026-27, as per Prime Database.


 

On 08Jul2026, Adani Enterprises raised Rs 15,000 crore via a QIP

03Jul2026 Arvind Ltd wants to raise QIP of Rs 600 crore 

Tweet 03Jun2026 Dee Development Engineers - preferential issue of equity shares, list of marquee investors

12Jun2026 Ather Energy wants to raise Rs 1,500 crore via QIP 

 

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In addition to QIPs and preferential issues, investors need to track (in addition to equity fund raising) the following things and take a comprehensive look (Prime Database tracks some of these things):

Govt of India stake sales in PSUs via offer for sale (OFS) or other modes.
promoter exits
rights issues
preferential share issues
insider exit
private equity (PE) exit
FPOs or follow on public offers
IPOs


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Data sources:

NSE QIP issues
BSE QIP issues
BSE QIP latest issues on top 
Prime Database  - QIP issues
Prime Database - preferential issues
QIP search on Screener.in (login needed)
Preferential issue search on Screener.in (login needed)
BSE market capitalisation / India market cap
 
Labels: promoter selling / insider exits - QIP fund raising - equity capital raising - data context - data contextualisation - need to contextualize data -  

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Note: By following the the original BSE and NSE filings by companies, investors can discern the names of marquee investors—such as mutual funds, insurance companies, pension funds, foreign portfolio investors, family offices, and prominent individual investors who participate in the QIP / preferential allotment. 

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Read more:
 
Blog of Blogs Theme-wise 
 
Weblinks and Investing
 
Buyback Offers and Weblinks 15May2023 (Updated 18Jun2026)

------------------------ 

Blogs on India Data:
 
India Forex Data Bank - Tweet thread 26Apr2026
 
Indian Economy Data Bank - Tweet thread 07Jun2026
   
India Fixed Income Data Bank - Tweet thread 08May2026
 
------------------------ 
 
Tweet threads on India Data Banks:
 
Tweet thread India Forex Data Bank
 
Tweet thread Indian Economy Data Bank

Tweet thread India Fixed Income Data Bank
 
------------------------ 
 
 
Collected Notes 2026  
 
Who is Eating my Gold ETF Return? (gold data / gold ETF data) 
 
JP Morgan Guide to Markets  28Feb2025
 
Corporate Groups and Listed Companies 29Dec2024 
 
Corporate Governance Concerns - Indian Companies 13Dec2024 (including family feuds / family disputes) 
 
Stocks and Peer Comparison by Industry 16Feb2024
 
various uploads on Scribd by VRK100 

 

 

Thursday, 9 July 2026

Nifty Indices Factsheets (NSE Indices) 09Jul2026

Nifty Indices Factsheets (NSE Indices) 09Jul2026 

 

 


(This is my 524th blog since 2010. Over the years, I have covered global financial markets, with a focus on India, and continue to share insights to help readers understand complex topics in simple language.

The views expressed here are for information purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation or investment advice. While the author is a CFA Charterholder with nearly 25 years of experience in financial markets, this content is intended to share general insights and does not constitute financial guidance. 

Please consult your financial adviser before taking any investment decision. Safe to assume the author has a vested interest in stocks / investments discussed if any.) 

  

This is just data for information purpose only >

Screenshots / images of monthly / quarterly factsheets of select Nifty Indices (NSE Indices) > sector and top 10 stock weights, returns, risk, P/E and P/B > 

The select indices are >

Nifty 50
Nifty Next 50
Nifty 500
Nifty Midcap 150
Nifty Smallcap 250
Nifty Total Market


Nifty Financial Services
Nifty Bank
Nifty Capital Goods 
Nifty Healthcare
Nifty Auto
Nifty FMCG
Nifty IT
Nifty Metal
Nifty Pharma

Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30
Nifty 200 Momentum 30
Nifty 200 Quality 30

Data source: Nifty Indices factsheets >


30Jun2026 data > Nifty indices factsheets >























- - -


Note: previous screenshots can be seen here


Template > 

3xx2026 data > 

Nifty 50
Nifty Next 50
Nifty 500
Nifty Midcap 150
Nifty Smallcap 250
Nifty Total Market


Nifty Financial Services
Nifty Bank
Nifty Capital Goods 
Nifty Healthcare
Nifty Auto
Nifty FMCG
Nifty IT
Nifty Metal
Nifty Pharma

Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30
Nifty 200 Momentum 30
Nifty 200 Quality 30

-------------------

 
Read more:
 
Blog of Blogs Theme-wise 
 
Weblinks and Investing
 
Buyback Offers and Weblinks 15May2023 (Updated 18Jun2026)

------------------------ 

Blogs on India Data:
 
India Forex Data Bank - Tweet thread 26Apr2026
 
Indian Economy Data Bank - Tweet thread 07Jun2026
   
India Fixed Income Data Bank - Tweet thread 08May2026
 
------------------------ 
 
Tweet threads on India Data Banks:
 
Tweet thread India Forex Data Bank
 
Tweet thread Indian Economy Data Bank

Tweet thread India Fixed Income Data Bank
 
------------------------ 
 
 
Collected Notes 2026  
 
Who is Eating my Gold ETF Return? (gold data / gold ETF data) 
 
JP Morgan Guide to Markets  28Feb2025
 
Corporate Groups and Listed Companies 29Dec2024 
 
Corporate Governance Concerns - Indian Companies 13Dec2024 (including family feuds / family disputes) 
 
Stocks and Peer Comparison by Industry 16Feb2024
 
various uploads on Scribd by VRK100 



Saturday, 4 July 2026

Nifty Valuation Tracker Series: June 2026 Update – Broad Market and Smart Beta Indices

Nifty Valuation Tracker Series: June 2026 Update – Broad Market and Smart Beta Indices 04Jul2026 

 

 


(This is my 523rd blog since 2010. Over the years, I have covered global financial markets, with a focus on India, and continue to share insights to help readers understand complex topics in simple language.

The views expressed here are for information purposes only and should not be construed as a recommendation or investment advice. While the author is a CFA Charterholder with nearly 25 years of experience in financial markets, this content is intended to share general insights and does not constitute financial guidance. 

Please consult your financial adviser before taking any investment decision. Safe to assume the author has a vested interest in stocks / investments discussed if any.) 

  

Introduction

Every investor wants to know whether the market is expensive or inexpensive. There is no perfect answer. However, comparing today's valuations with their own history provides a useful starting point.

This blog is the third part of the updated valuation framework for select NSE indices numbering six, building on earlier studies published:

1) On 21Apr2026 namely “How Valuations Shape Returns and Risk in Select NSE Indices,”

2) On 03May2026 namely “Valuation Changes in Broad Market and Smart Beta Nifty Indices," and 

3) On 31May2026 namely "Nifty Valuation Tracker Series: May 2026 Update – Broad Market and Smart Beta Indices"

This study focuses on current valuation positioning within a historical range. Summary data of all six Nifty indices are included as 'Additional data' at the end of the blog for ready reference of readers. 

The analysis compares current levels (as of 30Jun2026) against a 22-quarter baseline from Mar2021 to Jun2026 across six Nifty indices. 

It uses percentile-based positioning of PE, PB and dividend yield to assess whether valuations are relatively rich or attractive across segments.

It is not a prediction of future market returns. It is simply a framework to understand where valuations stand today. This is not investment advice.

Note: The idea is to update this 22-quarter framework each quarter as new data become available. For example, inclusion of the Jul-Sep2026 quarter will extend the dataset to 23 quarters in the next update, maintaining a rolling historical reference.


(article continues below) 

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Related blogs:

"Nifty Valuation Tracker Series: May 2026 Update – Broad Market and Smart Beta Indices" 31May2026 

Valuation Changes in Broad Market and Smart Beta Nifty Indices” 03May2026

How Valuations Shape Returns and Risk in Select NSE Indices” 21Apr2026 

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Why valuations matter

Valuations tell us how much investors are willing to pay for a company's earnings or assets.

A lower valuation does not guarantee better future returns. An expensive market can become even more expensive. Likewise, a cheap market can become cheaper.

Even so, valuations often help investors judge whether optimism or caution is already reflected in prices.

About this study:

The study covers the period from Mar2021 to Jun2026, a total of 22 quarters.

The analysis starts from Mar2021 because the method used to calculate Nifty 50 earnings per share changed at that point. Using only the newer data makes the historical comparisons consistent.

The study covers six selected Nifty indices, three broad and three "smart beta" indices. It is not a comprehensive study of the Indian equity market.

Indices covered are: 

Nifty 50, 
Nifty Midcap 150, 
Nifty Smallcap 250, 
Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30, 
Nifty 200 Momentum 30, and 
Nifty 200 Quality 30.

How to read the numbers:

Three valuation measures are used.

PE ratio compares price with earnings per share (EPS).

PB ratio compares price with book value.

Dividend yield usually moves in the opposite direction to valuations. A higher dividend yield often indicates a lower valuation.

The charts also show where the current valuation lies within its own historical range. A reading below the 25th percentile suggests valuations are relatively low compared with the past 22 quarters. A reading above the 75th percentile suggests valuations are relatively high.

No single measure should be used on its own. Looking at all three provides a more balanced picture.

Data note: The valuation measures are taken from Nifty Indices data. PE and PB ratios and dividend yield may not be updated at the same frequency because they depend on different underlying data

Readers should therefore view the three measures as broad indicators rather than precise real-time measures. 

 

Charts showing current valuation (Jun2026) versus historical range (22 quarter data from Mar2021 to Jun2026) of six select Nifty indices >

Click on the charts to view better >


 



2 What do the current valuations say? 

Broader Indices:

Among the broad market indices, Nifty 50 appears the least expensive. Both its PE and PB ratios are below the 25th percentile of their historical ranges. Dividend yield is also close to its historical median.

In fact, for Nifty 50, 1-year return (-5.4%), 3-year annualised return (8.8%) and 5-year annualised return (10%) are the lowest in the past 22 quarters. 

Nifty Midcap 150 sends mixed signals. Its PE ratio is below the historical median, suggesting reasonable valuations. However, its PB ratio is above the 75th percentile, indicating investors continue to pay a premium for net assets.

Dividend yield for Nifty Midcap 150, at 0.66 per cent, is the lowest since Mar2021. 

Nifty Smallcap 250 remains the most expensive broad market segment. Its PE ratio is above the 75th percentile, while its PB ratio is close to that level. Investors continue to place a high valuation on smaller companies.

Contrast between Nifty 50 and Nifty Midcap 150 

One could add Nifty 50 is cheap for a reason, its implied earnings contribution during 31Mar2026-30Jun2026 is just 2.5 per cent. This is way lower than implied earnings contribution of 22.1 per cent for Nifty Midcap 150 during the same period. 

That is a genuine earnings-led move in Midcap index, not a sentiment one (Check Section 3, with Chart showing PE and PB Expansion versus Index Returns from 31Mar2026 to 30Jun2026 for data). 

 

Smart Beta Indices:

Among the so-called smart beta indices, Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30 looks relatively inexpensive. Its PE ratio is below the 25th percentile and its PB ratio is at the lowest level seen during the study period. Its 3-year and 5-year returns are the lowest in the past 22 quarters. 

Nifty 200 Momentum 30 still trades at relatively rich valuations. Both PE and PB ratios remain above their historical median.

Nifty 200 Quality 30 is somewhere in between. Its PE ratio is close to the 25th percentile, while its PB ratio is near its historical median.

Dividend yield: A point worth noting

Dividend yields declined across all six Nifty indices during the Jun2026 quarter (except momentum). This may reflect a combination of rising share prices and changing corporate payout policies. Many companies have increasingly used share buybacks alongside, or instead of, larger cash dividends.

Readers interested in the subject may refer to my earlier article (Why Share Buybacks Are Making A Comeback In India 22Jun2026 ) on the growing use of share buybacks.

 

3 What changed during the June 2026 quarter? 

Valuations moved differently across the market.

Nifty 50 became modestly more expensive, mainly because its PE ratio increased.

Mid-cap stocks became slightly cheaper on a PE basis but more expensive on a PB basis.

Small-cap stocks experienced the largest increase in valuations, with both PE and PB ratios rising sharply.

Low Volatility became marginally cheaper.

Momentum became noticeably more expensive.

Quality changed very little during the quarter.

These changes remind us that different parts of the market can move in very different ways, even over a single quarter.

 

Chart showing valuation changes in six Nifty indices between end-Mar2026 and end-Jun2026 >

Click on the chart to view better >

 

Caveat: Valuation Changes (see chart immediately above) Are Not Directly Comparable Across All Indices for the period Mar2026 through Jun2026:

Nifty 50: No rebalance occurred between Mar2026 and Jun2026, so the valuation changes, in PE, PB and dividend yield, largely reflect genuine market re-rating of substantially the same large-cap stocks.

Nifty Midcap 150: Also not rebalanced during the period, making the changes mostly representative of how the same mid-cap universe was repriced by the market.

Nifty Smallcap 250: Likewise, no rebalance took place. The sharp rise in PE therefore mainly reflects significant valuation expansion within the existing small-cap universe.

Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30: Quarterly rebalancing in Jun2026 means the valuation changes reflect both market movements and changes in constituents and weights, reducing comparability with Mar2026.

Nifty 200 Momentum 30
: The Jun2026 semi-annual rebalance replaced 22 of the 30 stocks (73% turnover) in the index, resulting in major constituent turnover.  

The Mar2026 and Jun2026 indices therefore represent substantially different portfolios, so changes in PE, PB and dividend yield largely reflect portfolio reconstitution rather than pure market re-rating.

Nifty 200 Quality 30: The Jun2026 semi-annual rebalance replaced only one of the 30 stocks (3% turnover). Unlike Momentum 30, the Mar2026 and Jun2026 portfolios remained almost identical, making the valuation changes broadly comparable and largely reflective of market re-pricing rather than constituent turnover.

Overall: For the three broad market indices the March to June change is a clean valuation signal. For Low Volatility, Momentum and Quality, it mixes repricing with constituent change, so treat those comparisons with more care.

 

PE and PB Expansion vs Index Returns:

The chart below shows, for the period Mar2026 through Jun2026, the TRI (total return index) change, trailing PE and PB changes. 

From the data, readers can discern the implied earnings contribution of an index. For example, one could interpret the excess of 7.4% index change over trailing PE change of 4.9% as earnings component (2.5% = 7.4% - 4.9%).

In the case of Nifty Smallcap 250, PE has expanded much faster than earnings growth.  

One could say: 
 
Earnings Component ≈ Price Return − Multiple Expansion.
 

Chart showing PE and PB Expansion versus Index Returns (31Mar2026 – 30Jun2026) > 


 


4 Looking beyond valuations 

Valuations are only one part of the investment picture.

The table below adds historical returns and volatility for the same six indices. This provides useful context.

Midcaps, smallcaps and the Momentum index produced the highest historical returns over one, three and five years. However, they also experienced much higher volatility.

Low Volatility delivered the lowest volatility while still generating competitive long-term returns.

Quality offered returns similar to Nifty 50 but generally traded at much higher valuation multiples, reflecting investors' willingness to pay more for companies with stronger fundamentals.

Nifty 50 delivered lower returns than midcaps and momentum over this period, but with considerably lower volatility.

The broad pattern is familiar. Higher returns have generally come with higher risk.

It is important not to interpret these numbers as proof that higher valuations produce higher returns. They simply describe the experience of these six indices during the study period.

 

Chart showing cross index valuation, risk and return (only median values) >

22 Quarters data from Mar2021 to Jun2026 > 


5 What can investors learn? 

Current valuations suggest the large-cap segment is relatively inexpensive compared with its own recent history.

Smallcaps continue to trade at premium valuations.

Midcaps remain somewhere in between.

Among the smart beta indices, Low Volatility appears reasonably valued, Momentum remains expensive and Quality continues to command a premium despite a recent moderation in valuations.

These observations should not be viewed as buy or sell signals. They simply show where each index stands relative to its own history.

 

6 Shortcomings

This analysis has several limitations.

It covers only six selected Nifty indices.

The historical period is limited to 22 quarters because of the change in Nifty 50 earnings calculations since Mar2021.

The study focuses only on valuations. It does not consider earnings growth, interest rates, liquidity, macroeconomic conditions or investor sentiment.

 

7 Closing thoughts

Valuations are best viewed as a compass rather than a forecast.

They help investors understand where the market stands today, but they cannot predict where the market will go next.

Used alongside earnings, economic data and an investor's own objectives, valuation measures can provide a useful guide to long-term market positioning.

 

Check below for references and additional notes. 

(The author made some alterations on 05Jul2026, like, including the PE / PB expansion chart in section 3 above

 

- - -

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Additional data:

Data note: The valuation measures come from Nifty Indices. PE, PB and dividend yield may not update at the same frequency, because each depends on different underlying data.

The author's best guess is:
 
PE ratios update more often, because NSE India / Nifty Indices appear to refresh EPS as companies declare quarterly and annual results. 

In contrast, PB ratios update less often, because book value is reported half-yearly and yearly, not every quarter for all listed companies in India. It's possible NSE India may be updating book values based on published fiscal year (annual reports) data. 

Dividend yield updates with price daily and with the declared dividend when companies announce it, so its rhythm differs again. 

 

Index rebalancing frequency is as follows:

It is semi annual (March and September) for:

Nifty 50,
Nifty Midcap 150, and
Nifty Smallcap 250, 

For, Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30, it is quarterly (March, June, September, December).

For Nifty 200 Momentum 30 index, it is semi annual (June, December).

For Nifty 200 Quality 30 too, it's semi annual (June, December).

Notes on index weighting:

Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30 index's 'score' weighting is based on inverse of stock's volatility (standard deviation).

Nifty 200 Momentum 30 index's 'tilt' weighting is calculated as stock free float market cap multiplied by its momentum score.

Nifty 200 Quality 30 index's 'tilt' weighting is computed as stock free float market cap multiplied by its quality score.

Chart showing Index Characteristics of six Nifty indices >

 

 

Summary tables for all six indices. Readers may check the data for their own benefit >

 

 

 

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References:
 

Tweet 22Apr2025 Bizarre spike in valuation ratios (PE, PB and dividend yield) of Nifty 200 Momentum 30 index on 31Dec2024 vs previous day) 

Tweet 03Jun2021 - Nifty 50 PE calculation method change wef 31Mar2021

Tweet 01May2024 - Don't compare Nifty PE ratios on or after 31Mar2021 with those in prior periods

Tweet 07Jul2024 - NSE press release on change in Nifty 50 PE calculation method (NSE press release dated 23Feb2021 -- EPS used in PE calcualtion was based on standalone finanacials; from Mar2021, it is based on consolidated basis)

Screenshot of the above >  


 

 
Nifty Return Profile

Nifty Indices factsheets

Nifty 50
Nifty Midcap 150
Nifty Smallcap 250
Nifty 100 Low Volatility 30
Nifty 200 Momentum 30
Nifty 200 Quality 30

NSE Index Dashboard monthly - PDF for Jun2026

NSE Live Analysis - NSE Index performance daily - showing index values and valuation ratios of all Nifty Indices / NSE Indices on a daily basis  

NSE Historical Index yield - Find out daily valuation ratios (PB, PE and dividend yield) of all Nifty indices / NSE indices (dropdown menu)

NSE Market Watch - all indices 

Nifty Indices Index Methodology - Jun2026 PDF for equity indices 

Excel file: NSE Indices Valuation 30Jun26 

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Read more on passive equity funds and factor investing:

Top 10 Equity Indices Powering Passive Investing in India: Big-Picture View  29Jan2026 (Big picture view of Passive Equity Funds - passive funds)  

 
The Next Generation of Market Leaders: A Fresh Look at Nifty Next 50's Corporate Landscape 15Jan2026 (NSE Indices / Nifty Indices) 

NSE's Backtesting Claims Child Indices Beat Parent Indices - But Does It Hold in Real World? 09Dec2025 (incl calendar year returns of Nifty 50, Nifty Midcap 150 and the so-called smart beta indices) (NSE Indices / Nifty Indices)

 
Factor Investing in India: Do "Smart Beta" Indices Outsmart Nifty 50 and Midcap 150? 24Nov2025 (incl trailing returns; calendar year returns of Nifty 50, Nifty Midcap 150 and the so-called smart beta indices) (NSE Indices / Nifty Indices)

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