The Exchange Is Going Public: Inside NSE’s Own IPO

India’s biggest stock exchange just filed the paperwork to list itself. Here’s what the Draft Red Herring Prospectus actually says – no rumours, just the filing.

DRHP filed with SEBI – June 17, 2026 Company: National Stock Exchange of India Limited
14.89 cr
Shares on offer
₹0
Money raised by NSE
20
Book running lead managers
6.02%
Of the company being sold
01 – What actually happened

This isn’t a fresh fundraise. It’s a pure ownership sale.

On June 17, 2026, National Stock Exchange of India Limited (NSE) filed a Draft Red Herring Prospectus with SEBI for an Offer for Sale (OFS) of up to 14,89,05,525 equity shares of face value ₹1 each. There is no fresh issue component – NSE itself will not receive a single rupee from this IPO. Every share sold belongs to an existing shareholder cashing out part of their stake.

That distinction matters. In a fresh issue, the company raises capital for growth, debt repayment, or expansion. Here, the entire proceeds go to the selling shareholders – largely public-sector banks, insurers, and foreign institutional investors who have held NSE stock for years, long before it was tradeable on any exchange.

NSE has proposed to list on BSE – its closest rival – rather than on itself, since a stock exchange listing its own shares on its own platform would be a conflict of interest.
Offer type
OFS only
No fresh issue. 100% offer for sale by existing shareholders under SEBI ICDR Regulation 6(1).
Face value
₹1 / share
Pre & post-offer paid-up capital stays at 2,475,000,000 equity shares – this is a secondary sale, not dilution.
Price & dates
Not yet set
Offer size in ₹, price band, and bid dates are all pending SEBI’s observations.
02 – The business, in numbers

NSE by the numbers (as of March 31, 2026)

Founded in November 1992, NSE has grown into the largest stock exchange in India by turnover in cash market and equity derivatives every year since Fiscal 2001. The scale is genuinely hard to compress into a headline.

25.37 cr
Registered investor accounts
12.91 cr
Unique registered investors (26.93% CAGR since FY20’s 3.09 cr)
2,978
Listed entities on NSE (Mainboard + SME)
₹411.25 lakh cr
Combined market cap of all listed entities on NSE
1,325
Registered trading members
₹20.33 lakh cr
Total funds mobilised via NSE in FY26 alone
03 – Show me the money

Revenue held up. Profit didn’t – and the DRHP tells you exactly why.

NSE’s restated consolidated numbers show revenue from operations dipping slightly in FY26, and profit falling more sharply – a direct result of SEBI’s derivatives-market tightening through 2024 and 2025.

₹1,478
₹831
FY2024
₹1,714
₹1,219
FY2025
₹1,660
₹1,030
FY2026
Revenue from operations (₹ crore) Profit for the year (₹ crore)
Particulars (₹ crore)FY2024FY2025FY2026
Revenue from operations14,780.0117,140.6816,601.31
Total income16,352.0619,176.8318,713.37
Profit for the year8,305.7412,187.6910,302.06
Basic & diluted EPS (₹)33.5649.2441.62
Total assets (as at year-end)65,463.9869,466.6487,937.44
Core Settlement Guarantee Fund8,857.2412,075.2513,079.15

Figures converted from ₹ million (as reported in the DRHP’s Restated Consolidated Financial Information) to ₹ crore for readability. Weighted average EPS across FY24–FY26 (per the DRHP’s quantitative factors, weighted 1:2:3): ₹42.82.

04 – Where the revenue actually comes from

Nearly four of every five rupees come from transaction charges

This is the single most important number for understanding NSE’s risk profile: revenue is heavily concentrated in trading-linked transaction charges – and within that, options premium turnover alone.

78.65%Transaction charges
Transaction charges78.65%
Data feed, terminal & connectivity10.87%
Listing services2.12%
Licensing + clearing & settlement2.42%
Other operating income5.93%

Within transaction charges specifically, the options business alone contributed 60.22% of total revenue from operations in FY26 (down from 64.62% in FY24), with futures adding another 8.92%. That’s why SEBI’s October 2024 and May 2025 circulars tightening the equity derivatives framework – upfront premium collection, larger contract sizes, fewer weekly expiries – show up directly in NSE’s own numbers as lower Average Daily Trading Volume in equity futures and options through FY26.

05 – Who’s actually cashing out
Public-sector banks and insurers own more than half of what’s being sold

The top 10 selling shareholders account for 79.85% of the entire OFS. Group them by type, and a clear pattern emerges – this is old, legacy institutional ownership dating back to NSE’s founding-era shareholding, not a promoter or VC exit.

PSU banks, insurers & govt-owned entities53.58%
Foreign institutional investors26.27%
Other selling shareholders20.15%
Selling shareholder Shares offered Weighted avg. cost/share
State Bank of India2,47,50,000₹0.80
MS Strategic (Mauritius) Ltd1,60,00,000₹66.54
Canada Pension Plan Investment Board1,18,74,060₹324.13
Aranda Investments (Mauritius) Pte Ltd1,12,46,336₹62.38
Bank of Baroda1,09,86,250₹0.54
Stock Holding Corporation of India1,08,90,000₹0.46
General Insurance Corporation of India1,06,58,000₹5.26
The New India Assurance Co. Ltd1,05,00,000₹0.32
National Insurance Company Ltd60,00,000₹0.32
United India Insurance Company Ltd60,00,000₹0.50

Weighted average cost of acquisition per share as certified by Manian & Rao, Chartered Accountants, dated June 17, 2026. The wide spread in cost – from ₹0.32 to ₹324.13 – reflects decades of holding at very different entry points, further adjusted for NSE’s 4:1 bonus issue in 2024.

06 – India’s exchange vs. the world

By number of trades, NSE is already the world’s busiest exchange

According to the World Federation of Exchanges data cited in the DRHP, NSE’s cash equity market recorded more individual trades in FY26 than Nasdaq or NYSE – though this is a trade-count comparison, not a comparison of traded value.

NSE
7.95 bn
Nasdaq
5.93 bn
NYSE (ICE)
5.38 bn

Number of trades in cash equities, Fiscal 2026, per World Federation of Exchanges data cited in the DRHP.

In equity derivatives, the gap is even starker: NSE (including NSE IFSC) processed 36.99 billion contracts in FY26 – good for a 51.18% global market share in contracts traded across equity derivatives, and an 11.38% share in cash-equity trade count.

Domestic dominance
Cash market: 92.99%
Equity futures: 99.79%
Equity options: 74.71%
Currency futures: 99.48%
Currency options: 100.00%
India market share by turnover, FY2026, per the Redseer industry report cited in the DRHP.
Technology at scale
21.89 billion peak order messages processed in a single day (March 24, 2026)

293.85 million peak trades in a single day (June 4, 2024)

Zero reported data breaches across FY24, FY25 and FY26
07 – The fine print

What the DRHP itself flags as risk

Every DRHP carries a “Risk Factors” section, and NSE’s is unusually candid given its role as a market regulator. A few stand out.

01
Revenue is concentrated in trading volumes – and options specifically
78.65% of revenue from operations comes from transaction charges, and 60.22% of that is from options alone. Any regulatory move that dampens F&O activity (like the October 2024 and May 2025 SEBI circulars) hits the topline directly – as FY26’s numbers already show.
02
NSE is both a listed company and a first-level regulator
The DRHP discloses past SEBI show-cause notices, administrative warning letters, and settlement proceedings arising from routine inspections. Regulatory oversight of NSE doesn’t pause because NSE is now also a listed entity.
03
Securities Transaction Tax went up in April 2026
STT on futures rose from 0.02% to 0.05% of contract value, and on options from 0.10% to 0.15% of premium value, effective April 1, 2026 – a direct cost increase for the same trading activity NSE’s revenue depends on.
04
No identifiable promoter
NSE’s shareholding is diversified across financial institutions with no single promoter group – meaning no “promoter skin in the game” in the traditional IPO sense, and no promoter lock-in requirements apply.
05
Macro and geopolitical sensitivity
The DRHP explicitly flags that slowing GDP growth, rate hikes, currency depreciation, or escalating geopolitical tensions could reduce foreign portfolio flows and dampen trading volumes on the exchange.
08 – What’s still unknown

Where this goes from here

DRHP filed with SEBI Done
June 17, 2026 – this is the document this article is based on.
SEBI review & observations Pending
SEBI examines the DRHP and issues observations that must be addressed before filing the final RHP.
Price band & RHP filing Pending
Offer price, exact ₹ value of the OFS, and the final Red Herring Prospectus get filed with the RoC.
Anchor investor bidding Pending
One working day before the public bid opens, per standard SEBI ICDR process.
Bid/offer opens & closes Pending
Dates not yet announced.
Listing on BSE Pending
NSE’s designated stock exchange for this listing is BSE.
Registrar: MUFG Intime India Pvt Ltd Auditor: Price Waterhouse & Co Chartered Accountants LLP Chairperson: Shri Srinivas Injeti CFO: Shri Ian Desouza

A note on this article

Every figure in this article – offer size, financials, market share, selling shareholder details, and risk disclosures – is sourced directly from the Draft Red Herring Prospectus filed by National Stock Exchange of India Limited with SEBI on June 17, 2026, including data attributed within the DRHP to the Redseer industry report and the World Federation of Exchanges. Figures originally reported in ₹ million have been converted to ₹ crore for readability. No figures have been estimated, assumed, or sourced from unlisted/grey market activity.

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