
IPO-bound Indiqube Spaces FY25 net loss at ₹140 cr, revenue rises 27 pc to ₹1,103 cr
The net loss of Indiqube Spaces, which provides managed office spaces to corporates, stood at ₹ 341.50 crore during the 2023-24 fiscal.
Its total income rose to ₹ 1,102.93 crore in 2024-25 from ₹ 867.66 crore in the preceding year, according to its red herring prospectus (RHP) filed with Sebi.
Indiqube Spaces said the company has incurred losses during the last three fiscal years.
Indiqube Spaces manages a portfolio of 115 centres across 15 cities, covering 8.40 million square feet of area under management with a total seating capacity of 1,86,719 as of March 31, 2025.
Bengaluru-based Indiqube Spaces will hit the capital market on July 23 to raise up to ₹ 700 crore through its IPO.
The company has fixed a price band of ₹ 225 to ₹ 237 per share for its IPO that closes on July 25.
The company is raising ₹ 650 crore through the issuance of fresh issue and promoters will offload shares worth ₹ 50 crore under the offer for sale (OFS).
Out of the total net proceeds of the IPO, Indiqube Spaces will utilise ₹ 462.6 crore towards funding capex for setting up new centres, ₹ 93 crore for repayment and the rest for general corporate purposes.
The company, which was incorporated in 2015, had raised ₹ 324 crore in two funding rounds during 2018 and 2022.
Amid the rising demand for flexible workspaces, co-working operators are looking to expand their business across major cities in India. They lease office spaces from landlords and then sub-lease the areas to corporates of all sizes.
To support their expansion plan, they are looking to raise funds through various routes, including an IPO.
Already, Awfis and Smartworks have listed their companies on stock exchanges, while WeWork India recently received Sebi nod to launch its IPO.
Gross leasing of office spaces across India's top 8 cities is expected to cross 90 million square feet in 2025, beating last year's record demand of around 89 million square feet, according to Cushman & Wakefield.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
17 minutes ago
- Indian Express
SEBI allows Jane Street to resume trading in Indian market
Eighteen days after barring Jane Street from India's capital markets over alleged manipulative trading in Nifty futures, the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has permitted the New York-based proprietary trading firm to resume operations, according to market sources. However, the US firm will stay away from trading in both the options and cash markets until it resolves several issues with the regulator, according to a Reuters report citing sources. The development follows Jane Street's request to SEBI to lift certain restrictions imposed in its interim order dated July 3. In response, the firm deposited Rs 4,843.57 crore — the amount SEBI alleged it had unlawfully gained — into an escrow account with a lien in favour of the regulator. After reviewing the matter in line with its earlier directions, SEBI allowed the firm to re-enter the market, though legal proceedings are ongoing. Jane Street clarified that the deposit was made without prejudice to its legal rights and remedies, which it intends to pursue. In the July 3 order, SEBI accused Jane Street of manipulating Nifty futures and ordered it to cease all trading in Indian securities markets until the alleged profits were recovered. The interim action had an immediate impact — on July 11, the first weekly expiry after the ban, NSE's equity derivatives turnover dropped nearly 21% compared to the July 3 session. Legal experts say SEBI was within its rights to ease restrictions once Jane Street complied with the monetary directive. 'The July 3 order was interim. Now that Jane Street has deposited the amount, SEBI can consider modifications,' one expert noted. Jane Street, a major player in India's derivatives space, had strongly rejected SEBI's allegations. In internal communications, the firm called the regulator's claims 'extremely inflammatory' and said it was deeply disappointed. The firm denied orchestrating any 'intentional, well-planned and sinister scheme,' and insisted that its trading on January 17, 2024 — a key date in SEBI's probe — was standard arbitrage activity, a common and legitimate strategy. Jane Street also disputed SEBI's use of certain metrics to assess market manipulation and said it did not ignore the National Stock Exchange's (NSE) concerns. On the contrary, it claimed to have voluntarily paused trading to address feedback and later revised its strategies accordingly. 'We believed we had reached a shared understanding with NSE and reflected that in our trading adjustments,' the firm stated in an internal memo. 'Since February, we've made repeated efforts to engage with SEBI but have been consistently turned away.'

Economic Times
19 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Signature Global to launch homes worth Rs 6k cr in Gurugram in Jul-Sep: Chairman
Realty firm Signature Global plans to launch homes worth Rs 6,000 crore for sale in Gurugram in the current quarter to cater to the demand from end-users and investors. ADVERTISEMENT Signature Global was the fifth-largest listed real estate firm in 2024-25, in terms of sales bookings, falling behind Godrej Properties, DLF, Lodha Group and Prestige Estates Projects Ltd. The company had clocked record pre-sales of Rs 10,290 crore last fiscal. In an interview with PTI, Signature Global Chairman Pradeep Kumar Aggarwal said the company launched one housing project in Gurugram during the June quarter with total revenue potential of around Rs 3,500 crore."We are planning to launch 3.5-4 million square feet in the current quarter. The total sales potential would be around Rs 6,000 crore," he said the demand continues to be strong, especially for good brands. ADVERTISEMENT "The maximum demand is in the Rs 2-4 crore category," he observed. Recently, on the sidelines of a real estate conference, Aggarwal asserted that there was no bubble in the Gurugram housing market and ruled out any price crash. ADVERTISEMENT Aggarwal remains confident of achieving its target to sell Rs 12,500 crore worth of homes this fiscal, even as its pre-sales dipped 15 per cent in the June the April-June quarter, the company reported a 15 per cent decline in sales bookings to Rs 2,640 crore from Rs 3,120 crore in the year-ago period. ADVERTISEMENT The company sold 778 homes in April-June 2025 against 968 units a year terms of volumes, pre-sales dipped 20 per cent to 16 lakh square feet. ADVERTISEMENT During the June quarter, the average sales realisation stood at Rs 16,296 per sq ft compared to Rs 12,457 per sq ft in the last fiscal. To expand business and refinance debt, Signature Global is also looking to raise Rs 875 crore through the issue of non-convertible debentures. It posted a net profit of Rs 101.2 crore in the last fiscal, a sharp jump from Rs 16.32 crore in the preceding total income grew to Rs 2,637.99 crore in the last fiscal from Rs 1,324.55 crore in 2023-24. Signature Global has delivered 14.6 million sq ft of real estate so far. Another 10.4 million square feet is under construction. PTI (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)


Mint
19 minutes ago
- Mint
CleverTap's Leanplum buyout triggers layoffs, top deck exits three years on
Nearly three years after acquiring US-based Leanplum to power its global expansion, Peak XV Partners-backed software company CleverTap is grappling with integration challenges that have triggered top-level exits, layoffs, and liquidation of the acquired entity, multiple people told Mint. CleverTap confirmed the layoffs, executive exits, and Leanplum's liquidation, but maintained that the restructuring had largely impacted the acquired entity. 'As part of our long-term growth strategy and consolidation efforts, we are liquidating our Bulgaria-based Leanplum entity. This means parting ways with all Sofia (Bulgaria) employees through a fair, legal, and respectful process," a CleverTap spokesperson said in response to Mint's queries. 'These consolidation efforts have no impact on our customers, and they do not affect our employees in any other region." Nearly Leanplum's entire Sofia-based engineering team, a key offshore cost center, was let go. 'There were about 100 Leanplum employees when they joined; 60-70 are gone now," said a person familiar with the matter. 'And another 40-50 people from CleverTap India were laid off too." 'Employees were told everything was stable just days before," said a second person. 'Then the entire team was shut out, citing a 'bad marriage'." Big bet gone sideways CleverTap, a customer engagement software provider, has raised over $182 million so far and was last valued at around $800 million in 2022, when it raised $105 million in Series D funding from CDPQ, IIFL Finance, Peak XV, and others. The company was founded in San Francisco, California by Sunil Thomas, Suresh Kondamudi, and Anand Jain in 2013. In 2022, CleverTap acquired San Francisco-based Leanplum in May 2022 aiming to scale globally with a presence across North America, Europe, Latin America, India, Southeast Asia, and West Asia. But the integration of Leanplum with CleverTap was rocky from the start, said the people mentioned earlier. Product overlaps weren't resolved, sales funnel performance lagged, and Leanplum's existing client base turned out to be a disappointment, they said. 'The so-called existing clients were gone. I don't think anything came out of it," said the first person quoted above. CleverTap said many of Leanplum's customers have migratedto its systems. 'They are seeing strong results. We'll work closely with the remaining customers to complete their upgrade to CleverTap by year-end," CleverTap's spokesperson added. To be sure, recent rapid growth in artificial intelligence and reduced spending by clients has posed challenges for software-as-a-service (SaaS) companies. According to data from Venture Intelligence, while funding for Indian SaaS startups slightly improved to $1.8 billion in 2024 from $1.3 billion in the year prior, it was much lower than the $4.4 billion raised in 2022. Leadership churn and internal strain The Leanplum integration troubles apart, at least four senior executives have exited CleverTap in the past 3-4 months, multiple people said. Leanplum co-founder Momchil Kyurkchiev, who was named CleverTap's chief strategy officer following the acquisition; chief revenue officer Sidharth Pisharoti; chief operating officer and chief customer officer Abhishek Gupta; and vice president of finance and legal Sourabh Arora, among others, have called it quits, according to these people. 'They had hired expensive resources, and business growth couldn't keep up with the kind of salaries and seniority they brought in. The top deck is almost empty. People have either left or are mulling exits," said a third person aware of the development. CleverTap said it has since filled all key leadership roles. 'Leadership transitions, across levels and functions, are a natural part of any high-growth business. All other senior leadership roles have been filled, ensuring seamless continuity in leadership and execution," said the spokesperson. Ranjeet Walunj, who joined CleverTap in 2019 and previously served as senior vice president, was elevated to chief customer officer in April, according to the company's website. Earlier in November, CleverTap's global chief executive Sidharth Malik stepped down citing personal reasons, with cofounder Sunil Thomas returning as CEO. CleverTap's revenue growth has slowed sharply since the Leanplum acquisition—in 2023-24, its revenue rose 6.3% to ₹430.55 crore after growing at 46.3% in FY23. Profit slumped to ₹30.41 crore in FY24 and ₹30.45 crore in FY23 from ₹52.22 crore in FY22. CleverTap is yet to report its financials for FY25.