SME IPOs – Complete Explanation

  


1. What is an SME IPO?

Before understanding SME IPOs, you need to know two terms:

SME – Small & Medium Enterprises

MSME categories (based on turnover):

  • Micro: up to ₹5 crore
  • Small: up to ₹50 crore
  • Medium: up to ₹250 crore

SME IPOs include only Small & Medium enterprises — not micro.


2. IPO Meaning

The meaning of IPO is the same for all companies:

  • Fresh issue or OFS can be included
  • Shares are offered to the public for the first time

There is no difference in IPO structure for SME vs Mainboard; only the platform is different.


3. Where do SME companies get listed?

They cannot list on the normal NSE/BSE mainboard immediately.
They list on dedicated SME exchanges:

BSE SME Platform

NSE Emerge Platform

Both were launched in 2012.

Later, if a company grows large enough, it can migrate to the mainboard.


4. SME vs Mainboard – Key Differences

The transcript highlights three critical differences:


Difference 1: Minimum Number of Allottees

PlatformMinimum Allottees
Mainboard IPO1,000 investors
SME IPO50 investors

Difference 2: Minimum Investment (Lot Size)

PlatformMinimum Investment
Mainboard₹10,000 – ₹15,000
SME IPO₹1,00,000+

The lot size is huge → high entry barrier.

And even in the secondary market, you must buy/sell in full lots only.
You cannot sell shares worth just ₹5,000 or ₹20,000 separately.


Difference 3: Reporting Requirements

PlatformReporting Frequency
MainboardQuarterly results (Q1–Q4)
SME EmergeHalf-yearly results

This gives less frequent financial data, which increases risk.


5. Navigating the NSE Emerge Website

The transcript explains:

  • The Nifty SME Emerge Index exists
  • Launched in 2016 with a base value of 1000
  • Now at around 6863 (7x growth in a few years)

This is one reason SMEs are attracting attention.

But F&O is NOT allowed on this index.

The website shows:

  • Active SME IPOs
  • Market watch
  • Many stocks showing 0% movement daily

This reveals a major risk → low liquidity.


6. Major Risks Before Investing in SME Stocks

Risk 1: Low Liquidity

Many SME stocks show no buyers or sellers on most days.

If you want to exit:

  • You must wait until a buyer appears
  • Your capital may get stuck

Risk 2: Lot-size-based Buying/Selling

Even in the secondary market:

  • You MUST buy/sell the full lot
  • Lot value = typically ₹1,00,000+

So small investors cannot exit partially.


Risk 3: Retail Hype, Not Fundamentals

Most investors do not check:

  • What business the company actually does
  • Financial history
  • Valuation
  • Sustainability

Example used: Dronacharya Aerial Innovations


7. Example: Dronacharya Aerial Innovations (Explained)

Revenue Growth

From:

  • 0 (2020)
  • ₹1 lakh (2021)
  • ₹3.58 crore (2022)

So mathematically the growth % becomes 35,800%.
But such growth from near-zero base is not meaningful alone.

Profitability

  • Loss-making earlier
  • First time profit shown in FY22

Valuation

  • Issue Price: ₹54
  • Current Price: ₹172
  • P/E: 1008

Extremely high valuation for a young SME firm.

Price Chart Analysis

  • Continuous upper circuits
  • Then a fall of ~40%
  • Now moving sideways

This illustrates the typical SME cycle:

  1. Listing hype
  2. Circuits
  3. Sharp correction
  4. Illiquidity
  5. Sideways consolidation

8. Why Are Retail Investors Crazy About SME IPOs?

A statistic shown:

  • 247 companies listed on NSE Emerge till 2022
  • Capital raised: ₹3,801 crore
  • Market Cap: ₹35,375 crore

Market cap expanded ~10x from money raised.
This creates the “frenzy” and attracts retail buyers without research.


9. Key Takeaways

✔ SME investing is not bad, but it is risky

✔ Do thorough research before investing

✔ Don’t invest only because someone suggested

✔ Check:

  • Liquidity
  • Lot size
  • Reporting frequency
  • Business model
  • Financials
  • Valuation
  • Promoter background

✔ High returns are possible, but volatility is extreme

SMEs can double…
…and can also drop 40–70% quickly.


Conclusion

SME IPOs offer opportunities, but they require:

  • Higher capital
  • Patience
  • Detailed research
  • Awareness of liquidity issues
  • Understanding of valuation risk

Invest wisely—hype-driven decisions are dangerous.

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