Walmart-backed digital payments titan PhonePe has officially hit the pause button on its highly anticipated ₹10,115 crore (approx. $1.3 billion) Initial Public Offering (IPO) on the Indian bourses.
The strategic deferral comes directly in response to extreme secondary market volatility triggered by the escalating West Asia conflict involving Iran, which has rattled global equity sentiment and sent domestic benchmark indices tumbling.
1. Slicing Open the IPO Structure & Exit Pipeline
The proposed public issue had already secured formal clearance from the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) following a confidential pre-filing route. Because PhonePe has an 18-month regulatory window post-approval to execute the float, management opted for a tactical retreat rather than navigating a hostile macroeconomic window.
- A Pure Offer for Sale (OFS): The $1.3 billion issue was structured entirely as an OFS, meaning PhonePe itself would not receive any fresh primary capital. Instead, the listing was designed as a major liquidity event for early institutional backers.
- The Corporate Selling Mix: Majority owner Walmart (holding a 71.77% controlling stake) planned to pare its equity by roughly 9% to 10%, offloading up to 45.9 million shares. Concurrently, legacy venture backers Tiger Global and technology major Microsoft were slated to use the window to execute a complete exit from the fintech’s cap table.
2. The Great Valuation Disconnect
While PhonePe’s executive team, led by CEO Sameer Nigam, explicitly maintained that market turbulence was the sole driver behind the pause, investment banking circles point to underlying friction regarding the company’s public market valuation targets
With the Nifty 50 and BSE Sensex sliding roughly 7% to 9% since the outbreak of the geopolitical crisis, and Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) heavily liquidating Indian equities to hedge against surging crude oil prices, underwriters strongly advised PhonePe to temper its expectations. Pressing pause prevents a potential “down-round listing” that could severely dent consumer sentiment and disrupt the future IPO roadmaps of its sister company, Flipkart.
3. Operational Performance: Financial Trajectory Remains Strong
The delay is fundamentally a timing recalibration rather than a reflection of operational weakness. PhonePe continues to exercise extreme structural dominance over India’s digital payments architecture:
| Key Business Metric | Performance Baseline & Market Position |
| UPI Network Market Share | ~45% Absolute Volume Share — firmly ahead of principal rival Google Pay (~35%). |
| Monthly Transaction Volume | Processing close to 10 billion monthly transactions with a gross value exceeding $145 billion. |
| Revenue Expansion (CAGR) | Logged a stellar 56.25% revenue compound annual growth rate, reaching ₹7,114.85 crore ($857 million) in FY25. |
| Bottom-Line Trajectory | Restated net losses narrowed from $240 million down to $208 million in FY25. Meticulously stripping out legacy one-time ESOP costs tied to its structural corporate relocation from Singapore back to India, the core business would have posted a positive net profit of $76 million. |
Beyond basic peer-to-peer money transfers, PhonePe has spent the last year aggressively scaling high-margin alternative revenue streams, expanding heavily into consumer stockbroking via its Share.Market interface, domestic mutual fund distribution, consumer credit lines, and insurance tech.
