Market Cooling
After a record-breaking 2025 that saw 18 Indian startups raise โน41,248 Cr, the public markets have entered a period of recalibration. While 2025 was defined by regulatory ease and massive retail participation, Q1 2026 performance data suggests a sharp pivot in investor appetite.
What Happened
The Indian startup ecosystem experienced an IPO surge in 2025, buoyed by SEBIโs streamlined DRHP filings and the crossing of 20 Cr demat accounts. However, momentum stalled in early 2026. Despite five new-age tech companies debuting in the first three months of the year, secondary market reception has been largely flat, signaling that the ‘growth-at-all-costs’ narrative no longer sustains high valuations post-listing.
Why It Matters
The first-order impact is a clear valuation ceiling for companies lacking audited unit economics. Investors have moved from betting on TAM to scrutinizing free cash flow. This forces private-market late-stage startups to extend their runways or pivot toward margin-accretive products before approaching the bourses.
Second-order effects include a tightening of the IPO pipeline. Expect institutional investors to demand more stringent governance and longer lock-in periods, effectively cooling the exit velocity for early-stage VCs. This environment rewards founders who build ‘adjacent profit pools’ rather than those focused purely on user acquisition.
Third-order shifts suggest a permanent recalibration of the ‘tech premium.’ Future public offerings will be judged strictly as traditional businesses, likely depressing the multiples of loss-making entities that historically benefited from speculative market optimism.
The Numbers
- โน41,248 Cr: Total capital raised by Indian startups via IPOs in 2025 (Inc42)
- 18: Total number of Indian startups that listed in 2025 (Inc42)
- 20 Cr: Milestone reached in active demat accounts, driving retail liquidity (Inc42)
What To Watch
- Valuation Compression: Watch for subsequent 2026 IPOs to lower their price-to-earnings multiples relative to 2025 benchmarks.
- Governance Scrutiny: Expect increased audit requirements for startups planning to file DRHPs in the next 180 days.
- Operational Pivot: Look for late-stage private companies to announce cost-cutting or ‘adjacent’ revenue streams ahead of filing.