Categories: Share Market

What is Lenskart’s IPO? Lenskart IPO

What is Lenskart’s IPO?

  • Lenskart set a price band of ₹ 382–₹ 402 per share and aimed to raise about ₹7,278 crore (~US$828 million) via an IPO.
  • The IPO comprises:
    • A fresh issue of shares worth about ₹ 2,150 crore.
    • An Offer-for-Sale (OFS) by existing shareholders amounting to several thousand crores.
  • The company is valued at ~₹70,000 crore (≈ US$8 billion) if you take the top end of the price band.
  • The IPO subscription response was strong: bids ~28.26 times the shares on offer.

Key business details & strengths

  • Lenskart is one of India’s largest omni-channel eyewear retailers: online platform + physical stores.
  • For FY25 (year ended March 2025) it reported revenues of ~₹6,652.5 crore (≈ 23 % growth YoY) and a net profit of ~₹297 crore, a turnaround from a loss the prior year.
  • Proceeds from the IPO are to be used for:
    • Setting up new company-owned, company-operated (CoCo) stores in India.
    • Lease/rent/license payments for existing stores.
    • Investing in technology and cloud infrastructure.

The Listing Performance & Market Reaction

  • On listing day (10 Nov 2025), Lenskart’s shares listed at ₹ 395 on the NSE (≈ 1.7 % below issue price of ₹402) and at ₹ 390 on the BSE (~2.98% below).
  • The stock fell further during the day — reaching around ₹ 356 before recovering somewhat.
  • Despite very strong subscription, the muted listing suggests valuation concerns among investors.

Why the caution despite strong business metrics?

Here are some of the key reasons analysts point to:

  • High valuation: The PE (price-earnings) multiple implied by the valuation is considered “streched” by some analysts given recent profitability.
  • Competitive & margin pressures: Although Lenskart is growing, sustaining profitability in retail (especially omni-channel) is challenging; competition from online and offline players is intense.
  • Expectation vs reality gap: Given the hype (including high grey-market premium ahead of listing), a “soft” listing disappoints some retail investors and may impact sentiment in the short term.

Should investors hold or sell? – Analyst View

  • Some analysts suggest patience for Lenskart, focusing on medium to long-term growth rather than short-term listing gains.
  • Others caution that if the company cannot deliver improved growth and margins in coming quarters, the premium valuation could become a drag.
  • For retail investors: if you applied in the IPO with the hope of immediate gain, the listing outcome is disappointing; but if you believe in the business and its long-term potential, holding makes sense.

What to watch moving forward

Here are key factors to monitor in the coming quarters:

  • Revenue growth rate: Will Lenskart continue its ~23% growth or accelerate?
  • Margin trends: Are store expansions, real estate/lease costs, supply chain investments affecting margins?
  • Store expansion & international growth: How quickly and profitably it scales both in India (tier-2/tier-3 cities) and abroad.
  • Profitability consistency: Having turned profitable in FY25 (~₹297 crore), will that level improve or slip?
  • Competitive environment & market saturation: As organised eyewear grows, how does Lenskart defend/expand market share?
  • Valuation re-rating: The market will reassess the valuation multiple depending on performance; strong results could drive re-rating upwards, weak ones could lead to correction.

My Summary View

Lenskart’s IPO is a significant milestone for organised retail eyewear in India — the company is well positioned, with a strong brand, growing revenue, omni-channel presence, and new profitability. However, the listing performance suggests the market was cautious about paying a premium for future growth and margin expansion. For investors, this means a trade-off: you’re buying into growth and brand strength, but at a valuation that leaves little room for error.

If I were to advise: If you believe in Lenskart’s long-term vision (5+ years) and its ability to scale profitably, then holding makes sense. But if you were looking for a quick listing gain or are skeptical about retail margin expansion, it might be wise to wait and see the next 1-2 quarters of results before committing heavily.

Gopal Pramanik

Mera naam Gopal Pramanik hai aur main ek Stock Market Enthusiast, Blogger aur Financial Content Creator hoon. Main Bharat Ka Share Bazaar.Com ka founder hoon, jahan par main logon ko Share Market, Investing aur Financial Awareness ke baare me simple aur practical knowledge provide karta hoon.

Recent Posts

HDFC Bank Share Price Target 2030: Analysis & Investment Guide

Agar Aap Long Term Investing ke Liye ek Stable aur Reliable Stock Dhund Rahe Ho,…

1 day ago

TATA Steel Share Price: Target From 2030 Full Analysis

Tata Steel Limited India ki ek Leading Steel Manufacturing Company Hai, jo 1907 me Establish…

5 days ago

Infosys Share Price: Target From 2030 Analysis

Infosys Kya Karti Hai? Infosys Ltd. India ki Second Largest IT Services Company Hai (TCS…

1 week ago

Stock/Share Market Holiday 2026

Stock/Share Market Holidays in 2026 The 2026 stock market holiday calendar is now officially out…

1 week ago

Wipro Ltd Share Price: Target From 2030

Wipro Ltd India ki top IT Companies me se ek hai aur Globally IT Services,…

1 week ago

Suzlon Energy Share Price Target 2030 – Full Analysis

India me Renewable Energy ka Sector Bahut Tezi se Grow Kar Raha hai, aur is…

3 weeks ago