### IPO Proceeds Diverge from Capital Formation
The surge in India's primary markets is showing a concerning disconnect between capital raised and actual deployment for growth. Analysis of recent Initial Public Offering (IPO) proceeds reveals a significant portion is being allocated to debt repayment, with figures ranging from 28% to 30% over the past three years. An additional 12% to 15% is earmarked for general corporate purposes, while capital expenditure and expansion initiatives, crucial for long-term economic development, have typically received only 8% to 13% of the funds.
When combined with substantial secondary components, where funds accrue to selling shareholders like founders and private equity firms, IPOs are increasingly functioning as liquidity events rather than engines of fresh capital formation. While exits are a necessary component of a mature market, this trend suggests a diminishing inflow towards India's productive investment capacity and long-term capital expenditure cycle. This dynamic has contributed to market volatility, with over 70% of equity cash trades estimated to be intraday in FY25, indicating a preference for tactical trading over long-term accumulation. [cite:46, Input 1]
### Market Incentives Favor Tactical Liquidity
This allocation pattern reflects a market structure that rewards valuation over scale, secondary monetization over primary capital raising, and tactical exits over patient, long-term holdings. India's derivatives market, the world's largest by volume, underscores this rapid-turnover orientation. [cite:30, Input 1] While retail participation has expanded significantly, with demat accounts growing to over 19.4 crore by 2025, the nature of trading appears increasingly speculative. A SEBI report highlighted that 91% of individual traders in equity derivatives markets posted net losses in FY25.
### Budget 2026: A Potential Pivot Toward Depth?
As the nation approaches Budget 2026, there is considerable anticipation that it will serve as a critical juncture to recalibrate market incentives. The government has an opportunity to signal that listings should prioritize raising growth capital for capacity expansion over facilitating quick exits. [Input 1] The Economic Survey 2025-26 projects a modest GDP growth of 6.8%–7.2% for FY27, underscoring the need for robust capital formation.
### Cultivating Patient Capital for Sustainable Growth
The development of India's capital markets hinges on attracting and retaining long-duration, research-driven capital. Patient capital from institutional sources like pension funds, insurance pools, and sovereign wealth funds is essential for providing the depth required for sustainable market scaling. [Input 1] While domestic institutional investors (DIIs) have increased their share in Indian equities, surpassing foreign portfolio investors, long-term domestic capital remains under-allocated. [Input 1] Budget 2026 could play a role by establishing frameworks that reduce friction, broaden participation, and reward investment duration, rather than through direct fiscal concessions. [Input 1] The shift from private to public is a multi-year transition demanding readiness in governance and disclosures, areas where Budget 2026 can reinforce policy stability and predictability. [Input 1]