logo
NSDL nears listing deadline: How does the institutional giant measure up to CDSL's retail surge?

NSDL nears listing deadline: How does the institutional giant measure up to CDSL's retail surge?

Time of India19-07-2025
As India's largest depository heads for a SEBI-mandated IPO by July 31, investor focus sharpens on how NSDL compares to its listed peer CDSL, whose stock has surged 44% over the past year.
National Securities Depository Ltd (NSDL), the country's oldest and largest depository by value of assets under custody, is nearing its much-anticipated stock market debut, with Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) mandating a listing by the end of July.
Explore courses from Top Institutes in
Select a Course Category
Design Thinking
Healthcare
Degree
MCA
Data Analytics
Others
Product Management
Artificial Intelligence
healthcare
Leadership
Data Science
Project Management
CXO
others
PGDM
Management
Data Science
Operations Management
Finance
Cybersecurity
Public Policy
MBA
Technology
Digital Marketing
Skills you'll gain:
Duration:
22 Weeks
IIM Indore
CERT-IIMI DTAI Async India
Starts on
undefined
Get Details
But while investors await clarity on the final date, comparisons with its nimbler rival Central Depository Services Ltd (CDSL) have come into sharp focus, especially after NSDL's unlisted shares corrected nearly 20% from their 52-week highs, even as CDSL's listed stock rallied 45% over the past 12 months.
According to Bloomberg, NSDL is expected to start taking investor orders as early as next week, with the issue size scaled back to 5.01 crore shares from an earlier proposed 5.73 crore. The IPO, which may raise up to $500 million, will be an entirely offer-for-sale (OFS) issue from shareholders including
IDBI Bank
, the National Stock Exchange of India, and
State Bank of India
. NSDL will not receive any proceeds from the IPO.
Institutional depth vs retail velocity
'The NSDL–CDSL divergence is a textbook case of differing business models and market positioning,' said Bhavik Joshi, Business Head at INVasset PMS. 'NSDL's core strength lies in its institutional dominance — with over 89% of India's demat asset value under custody, and deep integration with mutual funds, insurance firms, and government securities.'
Joshi said, 'It also holds a strong presence in the unlisted and pre-IPO ecosystem, which is poised for regulatory tailwinds as private market infrastructure evolves.'
CDSL, by contrast, has emerged as a retail powerhouse, especially during the recent bull run. 'CDSL has emerged as the poster child for India's retail financialization. Its nimble tech stack, competitive pricing, and rapid onboarding have led to a dominant share of retail demat accounts,' said Joshi. 'Investors must distinguish between depth and breadth… CDSL, though more retail-centric and cyclical, may offer stronger operating leverage in upcycles.'
NSDL leads in value, CDSL in volume
NSDL leads across several institutional metrics. As of December 31, 2024, it had 64,535 issuers, more than double CDSL's 31,557. It also had 63,542 DP Service Centres (DPSCs), compared to 17,883 for CDSL. NSDL continues to dominate in the unlisted space as well, with 53,169 unlisted companies on its platform, versus 21,295 for CDSL.
In contrast, CDSL's strength lies in the number of demat accounts held, 14.65 crore as of December 2024, far outpacing NSDL's 3.88 crore. While CDSL holds more accounts, NSDL's custody value per account is significantly higher, averaging Rs 1.25 crore per account versus Rs 5 lakh for CDSL.
Unlisted market cools ahead of listing
In the unlisted market, NSDL shares have fallen from Rs 1,275 to around Rs 1,025 in recent weeks. 'The correction in NSDL's unlisted share price ahead of its IPO reflects recalibration rather than structural weakness,' said Joshi. 'It is not uncommon for pre-IPO valuations to adjust in response to listed peer benchmarks, changing market risk appetite, and revised growth expectations.'
'In NSDL's case, the re-pricing seems driven by three forces: softening investor expectations post-listing euphoria in CDSL, macro-level de-rating in tech-led financial infrastructure names, and the absence of a fresh primary capital infusion to signal near-term growth acceleration,' Joshi explained.
Still, he believes the long-term outlook remains solid. 'If the IPO is priced conservatively relative to CDSL's current valuations, the drawdown may serve to reset expectations — not undermine fundamentals.'
Entirely an OFS: no fresh capital
The IPO being entirely an OFS has also prompted questions about promoter intent. 'An IPO structured entirely as an Offer for Sale (OFS) naturally raises questions about promoter conviction and reinvestment intent,' Joshi said. 'While this doesn't inherently signal a lack of faith, it does alter the narrative.'
'NSDL is a cash-generating business with a long runway of regulatory and ecosystem-driven tailwinds. Its growth does not necessarily hinge on capital infusion,' he noted. However, in the absence of new capital, 'the spotlight shifts to governance quality, operating leverage, and dividend policy.'
NSDL has already informed shareholders that all pre-IPO equity shares will be locked in starting July 18, in line with Sebi norms. MUFG Intime India has been appointed as registrar, and ICICI Securities, Axis Capital,
HSBC Holdings
, and IDBI Capital are lead managers to the issue.
CDSL rally: overdone or justified?
CDSL's meteoric rise has raised concerns about whether valuations have overshot fundamentals. 'CDSL's rally over the past year mirrors the broader surge in retail market activity, a secular rise in demat account openings, and expanding use-cases for depositories across asset classes,' said Joshi.
But he cautioned, 'A large part of CDSL's revenues remains market-linked — from corporate actions, transactions, and float income — all of which are susceptible to market cycles.'
'If the current rally is pricing in uninterrupted volume growth, record IPO flows, and a persistently bullish retail environment, then there is risk of overextension,' he said. Still, long-term structural drivers remain intact, including SEBI's push for dematerialisation and broader digital adoption.
Who's better positioned for what comes next?
Looking beyond the listing, the medium-term growth opportunity for both depositories lies in expanding into new asset classes.
'The next phase of growth for depositories lies beyond equity markets,' said Joshi. 'Medium-term opportunities include dematerialisation of insurance policies, educational certificates, sovereign gold bonds, and even tokenised assets.'
CDSL is likely to benefit more from the ongoing expansion of the retail investor base, thanks to its quicker onboarding processes, wider integration with partners, and flexible tech architecture. NSDL, on the other hand, is better positioned to lead on the institutional front, particularly in managing complex asset classes and large-scale recordkeeping, owing to its long-standing relationships and institutional expertise, according to Joshi.
Also read |
NSDL IPO set to open soon: Unlisted share price down 20% from peak. Here are 7 things to watch out for
'While CDSL has the retail velocity and brand recall, NSDL brings depth, trust, and compliance strength,' Joshi said. 'The growth runway is large enough for both to scale — but the market will reward whoever leads the transition from compliance infrastructure to financial infrastructure utility.'
(
Disclaimer
: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of the Economic Times)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NSDL Q1 profit up 24% to Rs 82 cr on higher revenue, market share gains
NSDL Q1 profit up 24% to Rs 82 cr on higher revenue, market share gains

News18

time24 minutes ago

  • News18

NSDL Q1 profit up 24% to Rs 82 cr on higher revenue, market share gains

Agency: Last Updated: August 12, 2025, 19:45 IST Representational image (Image: News18) New Delhi, Aug 12 (PTI) National Securities Depository Ltd (NSDL) on Tuesday posted 24 per cent rise in net profit at Rs 82.6 crore for June quarter 2025-26 driven by strong revenue growth and expansion in market share. In the same quarter last year, the depository had logged a profit of of Rs 66.6 crore. Total income climbed 21.68 per cent to Rs 190.4 crore in the quarter under review from Rs 156.5 crore in April-June FY25, the newly-listed company said in a statement. Operationally, NSDL's demat account market share surged to 15.5 per cent from 9.4 per cent a year ago, with the total number of demat accounts crossing the 4-crore mark as of June 30, 2025. Swipe Left For Next Video View all In the unlisted market segment, the number of companies admitted rose to 10,392 during the quarter, taking the depository's equity market share to 73.2 per cent, up from 70.8 per cent in Q1 FY25. NSDL, which debuted in the market on August 6, also retained a dominant 86.6 per cent share of total demat custody value. PTI SP ANU ANU (This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed - PTI) view comments News agency-feeds NSDL Q1 profit up 24% to Rs 82 cr on higher revenue, market share gains Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Read More

Sebi flags ₹77,800 cr as difficult-to-recover dues in FY25 annual report
Sebi flags ₹77,800 cr as difficult-to-recover dues in FY25 annual report

Business Standard

timean hour ago

  • Business Standard

Sebi flags ₹77,800 cr as difficult-to-recover dues in FY25 annual report

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) has identified approximately ₹77,800 crore as 'difficult to recover' dues in its annual report for the financial year 2024-25, marking a nearly 2 per cent increase from the previous year. These dues remain unrecovered despite exhaustive recovery efforts. Of the total, over ₹61,200 crore pertains to cases pending before court-appointed committees, while ₹12,300 crore relates to parallel proceedings pending in state PID courts, the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT), and the Supreme Court. Sebi clarified that categorising dues as difficult to recover (DTR) does not prevent officials from pursuing recovery if circumstances change. In the report, Sebi Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey underscored the regulator's commitment to simplifying regulations, easing norms for foreign portfolio investors (FPIs), and enhancing investor awareness. Pandey said Sebi will undertake a comprehensive exercise to rationalise existing regulations, mindful that excessive or overlapping rules increase compliance costs. He added that Sebi aims to streamline the regulatory framework for FPIs to facilitate smoother operations and promote long-term foreign capital inflows. Recent initiatives include easier registration for FPIs investing solely in Indian government securities and a proposed single-window clearance system — 'SWAGAT-FI' — for low-risk FPIs. 'Efforts will focus on streamlining processes, removing regulatory bottlenecks, and strengthening engagement with FPIs and stakeholders. Investor education, including cyber-fraud awareness, remains a top priority,' Pandey said. Other key focus areas this year include easing compliance requirements for stockbrokers, simplifying offer documents, reviewing restrictions on asset management companies, and implementing reforms for alternative investment funds. Sebi is also reviewing the margin trading funding (MTF) framework, including eligible securities. As of August 8, the MTF book stood at ₹92,000 crore, according to NSE data. The regulator has constituted a committee to review Takeover Regulations, tasked with simplifying and strengthening the framework in line with judicial rulings and global best practices. Sebi also conducted a nationwide investor survey to shape its investor awareness strategy and has bolstered cybersecurity and technological infrastructure. Inspection activities surged significantly last year, with 312 stockbroker inspections in FY25, up from 146 in FY24. Inspections of investment advisers and research analysts also rose sharply to 207 and 149, respectively, compared to 21 and 15 the previous year. Settlement application filings jumped to 703 in FY25 from 434 in FY24. Regarding pending cases, as of March 2025, 520 matters awaited resolution at the Supreme Court, while 960 were pending at the Securities Appellate Tribunal (SAT).

NSDL Q1 Results: Depository posts 15% YoY jump in Q1 PAT to ₹90 crore in first earnings announcement after listing
NSDL Q1 Results: Depository posts 15% YoY jump in Q1 PAT to ₹90 crore in first earnings announcement after listing

Mint

timean hour ago

  • Mint

NSDL Q1 Results: Depository posts 15% YoY jump in Q1 PAT to ₹90 crore in first earnings announcement after listing

NSDL Q1 Results: National Securities Depository Limited (NSDL) posted a growth in consolidated net profit of 15.16% year-on-year (YoY) for the first quarter of the financial year 2025-26 (Q1 FY26) on Tuesday, August 12, post market trading hours. NSDL's Q1 consolidated profit stood at ₹ 89.63 crore in the April-June quarter of FY26, as against ₹ 77.82 crore in the same quarter a year ago. However, the consolidated revenue saw a 7.5% YoY decline in revenue from operations to ₹ 312.03 crore in Q1 FY26, compared with ₹ 337.29 crore in the corresponding quarter last year. The decline in Q1 revenue can be attributed to a slide in revenue from banking services, even as depository segment growth remained robust. During the quarter under review, total expenses slipped by 14% YoY to ₹ 228.03 crore in the quarter ended June 30, 2025. This is the first-ever earnings announcement by NSDL post its stock market debut last week. Ahead of the Q1 results announcement, NSDL share price closed the session at ₹ 1288.80, up 1.24% on the BSE. Since the results were announced post-market hours today, NSDL stock is expected to react to the Q1 earnings once trading resumes tomorrow. NSDL stock had made a decent stock market debut on August 6, listing at a 10% premium over the IPO price at ₹ 880 apiece on BSE. As of today's close, NSDL stock has delivered its IPO investors a 61% return on their investment. While the stock hit a high of ₹ 1,425 post listing, it has moderated from these levels. Analysts remain bullish on NSDL stock for the long term, given its strong fundamentals and dominant market position. However, they have advised short-term investors can look to book profits amid a sharp rally in NSDL shares.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store