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LG Electronics India IPO list at a 50% premium

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On October 14, 2025, LG Electronics India made its stock market debut with a bang — listing at a 50% premium over its issue price. The shares opened at ₹1,710 on the NSE against the IPO price of ₹1,140.

This spectacular listing immediately valued the company at over ₹1 trillion in market capitalization.


Key IPO & Listing Details

Here are the important numbers behind this IPO listing:

MetricDetail
IPO TypeOffer for Sale (OFS) — the South Korean parent sold its stake; proceeds do not go to the Indian subsidiary
Issue Size₹11,607.01 crore
Price Band₹1,080 to ₹1,140 per share
Subscription~ 54.02× overall
Grey Market Premium (GMP) before listingUp to ~ ₹430, reflecting lofty expectations
Listing Price~ ₹1,710 (50% above ₹1,140)

Investor excitement was clearly strong: the IPO was oversubscribed nearly 54 times, with robust demand from QIBs, non-institutionals, and retail investors alike


What Drove the Strong Listing Premium?

Several factors coalesced to produce this stellar debut:

  1. Brand strength & market trust — LG has significant consumer trust and scale in India’s home appliances and electronics market.
  2. Attractive valuations vs peers — Even after stepping up, analysts see potential upside when compared with industry multiples.
  3. Rising demand in consumer durables — With rising incomes and a preference shift toward premium appliances, market tailwinds supported the listing.
  4. Strong institutional backing pre-listing — The anchor book was well subscribed, giving confidence ahead of the listing. HDFC Sky+1

Still, many analysts initially expected a listing gain of ~ 30%–35% based on GMPs and market sentiment. The 50% premium exceeded even optimistic forecasts.


Market Impact & Analyst Sentiment

  • The listing has become one of the largest and most successful IPO debuts in recent years in India.
  • Analysts are generally bullish, citing strong fundamentals and further upside if performance continues.
  • Some caution that the first-day “pop” may overshoot intrinsic value, so holding too aggressively could be risky for short-term investors.

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