logo
Spunweb Nonwoven IPO GMP: SME Issue Gets Over 47x Subscription So Far, To Close Today

Spunweb Nonwoven IPO GMP: SME Issue Gets Over 47x Subscription So Far, To Close Today

News1816-07-2025
Last Updated:
The GMP of the Spunweb Nonwoven IPO currently stands at 43.75%, indicating strong listing gains.
Spunweb Nonwoven IPO GMP Today: The initial public offering of Spunweb Nonwoven Ltd is going to be closed today, Wednesday, July 16. The price band of the NSE SME IPO, which aims to raise Rs 60.98 crore, has been fixed in the range of Rs 90 to Rs 96. Till 10:00 am on the final day of bidding on Wednesday, the issue received a 47.02 times subscription, garnering bids for 19,85,11,200 shares as against the 42,21,600 shares on offer.
The retail and NII participation stood at 70.17x and 53.48x, respectively. The QIB category received a 1.66x subscription.
The IPO's grey market premium currently stands at 43.75%, indicating strong listing gains.
The three-day IPO was opened on July 14.
Spunweb Nonwoven Ltd, founded in 2015, manufactures and exports nonwoven fabrics used in hygiene, medical, packaging, agriculture, and construction sectors, with a strong focus on quality and advanced testing systems.
Spunweb Nonwoven IPO GMP Today
According to market observers, unlisted shares of Spunweb Nonwoven Ltd are currently trading at Rs 138 against its upper IPO price of Rs 96. It means a grey market premium or GMP of Rs 42, which is 43.75% over its issue price, indicating strong listing.
The GMP is based on market sentiments and keeps changing. 'Grey market premium' indicates investors' readiness to pay more than the issue price.
The price band of the SME IPO has been fixed in the range of Rs 90 to Rs 96 apiece.
Its minimum lot size is 1,200. It means investors will have to apply for a minimum of 1,200 shares or in multiple thereof.
Retail investors require a minimum capital of Rs 2,16,000 to apply for the IPO.
Spunweb Nonwoven IPO Allotment And Listing Dates
The basis of allotment of the Spunweb Nonwoven IPO will be finalised on July 17.
Its shares will be listed on the NSE Emerge, July 21.
The IPO, which is a bookbuilding of Rs 60.98 crore, is entirely a fresh issue of 63.52 lakh shares.
Spunweb Nonwoven Ltd's revenue increased 47% and its profit after tax (PAT) rose 98% between the financial year ending with March 31, 2025 and March 31, 2024.
Vivro Financial Services Private Limited is the book-running lead manager of the Spunweb Nonwoven IPO, while MUFG Intime India Private Limited (Link Intime) is the registrar for the issue.The market maker for Spunweb Nonwoven IPO is Rikhav Securities Ltd.
view comments
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.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Knitwear to apparel, Tamil Nadu's textile belt starts feeling US's 50% tariff heat
Knitwear to apparel, Tamil Nadu's textile belt starts feeling US's 50% tariff heat

Indian Express

time7 minutes ago

  • Indian Express

Knitwear to apparel, Tamil Nadu's textile belt starts feeling US's 50% tariff heat

IN TIRUPPUR, India's knitwear capital, exporters are already feeling the heat of the 50 per cent tariff US President Donald Trump announced Wednesday. They say orders are being paused, redirected, or lost entirely to competitors like Bangladesh, Pakistan, Vietnam, and Cambodia, all of whom lower US tariffs ranging between 19% and 36%. One Tiruppur exporter told The Indian Express that his regular US shipment had already been diverted to Pakistan. Another said his American buyer asked him to 'hold on' before confirming their summer order. A third revealed that buyers were previously demanding that exporters absorb the 25% tariff hike — a burden that has now doubled overnight. The revised duties, including baseline and remedy-linked tariffs, now push effective rates for some knitted garments to as high as 64%, rendering products up to 35% more expensive than those from regional competitors. What was initially seen as a major setback is now viewed by exporters as 'a de facto trade embargo'. The blow comes at a particularly cruel time when Tamil Nadu's textile belt was preparing for a rebound in US orders. Tiruppur, Coimbatore, and Karur collectively employ over 1.25 million workers and export Rs 45,000 crore worth of garments annually. Just weeks ago, optimism surged on the back of the India–UK Free Trade Agreement (FTA) and growing US interest in Indian goods due to elevated tariffs on China (125%-145%) and Myanmar (40%). Many exporters in Tamil Nadu had invested in new machinery to meet the expected surge. That hope is now turning into despair under the weight of retaliatory tariffs, especially with respect to China, which is now at 30% and could see a further downward revision once Beijing inks a deal with Washington DC. 'This is a setback,' said K M Subramanian, president of the Tiruppur Exporters' Association (TEA). 'Standalone exporting companies will be hit first. Buyers are already asking us to absorb part of the tariff. Our margins are just 5% to 7%; how can we share this cost?' Subramanian said while 30% of Tiruppur's exports go to the US, a diverse buyer base in Europe and the Middle East may provide some cushion – but not without pain. 'The non-branded buyers will shift immediately. Branded ones may stay because of the social compliance and operating protocols we offer, but we will still bleed for some time.' Textiles is a labour-intensive sector, and there are worries of job losses if the market shrinks. If exports contract 10-20% due to loss of orders, it can threaten 100,000–200,000 textile and garment jobs collectively in the three hubs — Tiruppur, Karur and Coimbatore — over the next few months. Tiruppur alone contributes Rs 40,000 crore to knitwear exports, supplying global giants like Walmart, GAP, and Costco, and accounting for 55% of the country's knitwear exports. The region had hoped to expand it by 10–15% in FY2025–26. Now, the outlook is grim, with analysts forecasting a 40–50% fall in US-bound orders, especially in cotton and knitted apparel segments. The fallout is not confined to garments alone. In Coimbatore and Karur, known for home textiles, order stagnation has already begun. K Selvaraju, secretary general of the Southern India Mills' Association, said buyers have started deferring or holding off on their summer bookings for bed linens and towels – key products traditionally finalised by October. 'We're hearing 'hold on' from clients who had placed advance enquiries,' Selvaraju said. 'If we miss this window, we miss the season.' Karur alone exports nearly Rs 9,000 crore in home textiles each year, with Rs 6,900 crore going as direct exports. Coimbatore mills send large volumes of cotton towels and kitchen linens to the US – now burdened with higher duties. 'This isn't just about one tariff hike – its compounding an already weak environment,' Selvaraju said, pointing to India's 11% import duty on cotton and a GST duty inversion that further hurts competitiveness. 'Polyester raw material is taxed at 18%, yarn at 12%, but finished garments are taxed at 5%. This adds 6-7% to export costs, while competitors don't have such inverted duties.' Meanwhile, the quality of cotton imports from Brazil, which make up 45% of this year's inbound shipments, is under scrutiny for not always meeting US-mandated standards. Selvaraju has urged the Centre to negotiate a cotton-forward deal, offering duty-free access to US cotton in exchange for apparel exports made from it. The global textiles market is highly competitive; India's key rivals face no such punitive hikes. Bangladesh continues with an effective rate of 35–36%, Pakistan has successfully negotiated a 19% tariff, Vietnam is at 20–21%, and Cambodia, though previously at 49%, now enjoys a 19% rate after an August 1 revision. By comparison, India's 50% penalty rate is not only isolated but unprecedented. One Tiruppur manufacturer admitted his shipment was lost to Pakistan. 'They seem to have offered a better price,' he said. 'The order slipped.' Subramanian reiterated that Bangladesh remains India's fiercest rival in the US market. 'Their 20% rate means they're much cheaper, significant when your margin is about 5%.' This margin has now all but vanished. With total duties touching 64%, non-branded US buyers are already shifting to cheaper options. 'They shift overnight,' Subramanian warned. Industry leaders are urging for immediate policy relief. 'The government had then provided an extended credit guarantee-linked scheme,' Selvaraju recalled, referring to pandemic-era support. 'It's time to bring that back.' He also pressed for eliminating the 11% cotton import duty and restructuring the GST regime on manmade fibres. 'For our exports to remain viable, tax on all raw materials must be below 5%.' If ignored, the consequences will be stark. Indian suppliers could lose permanent ground to Bangladesh, Cambodia as well as Vietnam and Pakistan – all of whom now enjoy cheaper landed prices in the US. The ripple effect – order shrinkage, idle capacity, and job losses – is already underway. 'The US market still wants to buy from us,' Selvaraju said. 'They like Indian cotton, the Indian make. But political and policy hurdles are pushing them away.' Ramdas, a mid-sized factory owner in Tiruppur, said the next two to three weeks will be decisive. 'We haven't seen cancellations yet, but the tone is changing. Everyone's cautious.' Yet, there is cautious hope. Subramanian believes this downturn could still be survived if India moves quickly. 'We got through Covid. We will get through this,' he said. 'We are talking to the Central government. We are urging negotiations with the US.' Some exporters also hope that pressure from big American brands – worried about higher retail prices – might eventually force a rethink in Washington.

Canadian frozen food giant, six other companies to invest over Rs 4000 crore in Ujjain division
Canadian frozen food giant, six other companies to invest over Rs 4000 crore in Ujjain division

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

Canadian frozen food giant, six other companies to invest over Rs 4000 crore in Ujjain division

Indore: A Canadian multinational frozen food company, along with six other food processing units, have pledged to invest a total of over Rs 4000 crore in Ujjain division to establish manufacturing facilities. McCain Foods India Pvt Ltd submitted an expression of interest (EOI) to Madhya Pradesh Industrial Development Corporation (MPIDC), intending to invest Rs 3800 crore in Agar-Malwa to produce potato flakes and fries, thereby generating employment for 2,500 people. MPIDC received investment proposals totalling Rs 4,581 crore from seven food processing industries aiming to set up manufacturing facilities at various locations in Ujjain. "In a major boost to the industrial ecosystem in the state, McCain Foods India Pvt Ltd has taken up land in Agar-Malwa to set up a manufacturing unit. The formal process for land allotment to the company has begun. We are also issuing letter of intent to six other food processing units in Ujjain division. These investments will create thousands of local jobs," said MPIDC executive director in Ujjain Rajesh Rathod. Prataap Snacks Yellow Diamond has acquired land in Maksi Phase-II and proposed to invest Rs 200 crore, creating employment for 1000 people. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Take a Look - How Watching Videos Can Boost Your Income TheDaddest Undo According to MPIDC, Amitex Foods plans to establish a unit to produce dry potato flakes with an investment of Rs 250 crore in Agar-Malwa. Safal Foods is set to develop in Mandsaur with an investment of Rs 150 crore and the creation of 300 jobs. Sanket Oils, specializing in grain oil processing, pledged to invest Rs 75 crore and generate employment for 150 people. Iscon Balaji Foods Pvt Ltd secured land in Vikram Udyogpuri, Ujjain, and is expected to invest Rs 92.74 crore, creating 383 jobs. Shri Ganpati Agro will establish a unit for foods, processed agricultural, and marine products in Jhanjharwada, Neemuch, with an investment of Rs 5.5 crore and the creation of 70 employment opportunities. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area. Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with Raksha Bandhan wishes , messages and quotes !

Trump's 50% pain, India's 100% gain
Trump's 50% pain, India's 100% gain

New Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • New Indian Express

Trump's 50% pain, India's 100% gain

The paradox of power is that it burns the hands of those who mistake a mandate for a flaming sword. When a democratically elected leader like Donald Trump wields his mandate not as a trust but as a cudgel, slamming down sweeping tariffs to prop up the shimmering illusion of his 'America First' mirage, he does more than rattle rivals; he risks setting fire to the very foundations of his perverse economic dreamscape. Trump's terrible tariffs are a thunderbolt aimed at India's economic heart. Pharmaceuticals ($12.2 billion), textiles ($8 billion), electronics, and automobiles—key pillars of India's $74-billion US exports—face a 50 percent levy, potentially shaving more than 0.50 percent off the GDP, according to various estimates. The rupee, teetering at 87.95 to the dollar, amplifies the pain for India's 400-million-strong middle class, whose purchasing power drives 50 percent of consumption. Yet, in this storm lies India's chance to reshape its destiny with audacious reforms that ignite demand, attract investment, and rival China's manufacturing might. It requires a major reversal of economic model which places emphasis on supply. In fact, excessive supply hasn't been able to create demand proportionally. To spur demand, India's middle class, burdened by a 30-40 percent income tax on earnings above Rs 15 lakh, needs urgent relief. Cutting the rate to 15 percent for incomes under Rs 15 lakh would lift disposable income by 12-15 percent, unlocking $50 billion in fresh consumption, according to Niti Aayog's 2024 estimate. In rural India—where consumption grew just 4.5 percent in 2024 versus 6.2 percent in cities—direct cash transfers are essential. Expanding the Rs 2 lakh crore PM Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana to provide Rs 5,000 a month to 100 million rural families could drive a 10 percent surge in rural demand, adding 0.5 percent to GDP. Such a bottom-up strategy would replace the failed trickle-down approach, which has poured Rs 1.45 lakh crore into corporate tax cuts since 2019 with little to show for it in jobs.

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