Ather Energy IPO listing date today. Here's what GMP, experts signal about debut of shares in stock market today
Ather Energy IPO Listing: Ather Energy shares are set to make their debut in the Indian stock market today. The initial public offering (IPO) of electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Ather Energy Ltd ended with modest demand. Ather Energy IPO listing date is today, May 6.
The public issue was open for subscription from April 28 to April 30. The IPO allotment was finalised on May 2. Ather Energy IPO listing date has been fixed as May 6, Tuesday, and Ather Energy shares will be listed on both the stock exchanges, BSE and NSE.
'Trading Members of the Exchange are hereby informed that effective from Tuesday, May 6, 2025, the equity shares of Ather Energy Limited shall be listed and admitted to dealings on the Exchange in the list of 'B' Group of Securities,' a notice on the BSE said.
Ather Energy shares will be a part of Special Pre-open Session (SPOS) on Tuesday, May 6, 2025, the notice added, and the stock will be available for trading from 10:00 AM.
Ahead of the Ather Energy IPO listing today, investors watch out for the trends in the grey market premium (GMP) to gauge the estimated listing price. Here's what Ather Energy IPO GMP indicates:
Ather Energy shares are showing a muted trend in the unlisted market with a modest grey market premium (GMP) today. According to stock market observers, Ather Energy IPO GMP today is ₹ 14 per share. This indicates that in the grey market, Ather Energy shares are trading at ₹ 335 apiece, which is at a premium of 4.36% to its issue price of ₹ 321 per share.
Analysts also expect Ather Energy IPO listing to be at a modest 3-5% premium, given the trends in the GMP today.
'The final day subscription surge — particularly from Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs) — suggests a last-minute effort to support the issue amid fears of under-subscription. This points to a lack of broad-based enthusiasm and raises concerns about the IPO's inherent demand quality. As a result, we expect a flat to mildly negative listing, likely in the range of ±5% under the best-case scenario,' said Prashanth Tapse, Senior VP (Research), Mehta Equities Ltd.
According to Tapse, flat Ather Energy IPO listing seems to be justified, as the issue was aggressively priced, especially when benchmarked against peer OLA Electric, whose post-listing performance has been underwhelming.
'We believe the electric two-wheeler (EV 2W) segment remains highly competitive and capital-intensive, with most players, including market leaders, struggling to achieve sustainable profitability and raising concern with new investors. Given these facts, we recommend a 'HOLD' only for high-risk taking investors, who are comfortable with short- to medium-term volatility while conservative investors may prefer a wait-and-watch approach, allowing the stock to establish a more reasonable valuation post-listing,' Tapse said.
Industry being in High Growth – High Competition and High Cash Burning segment, we will see high volatility both in business as well as in the price action, hence investors should be aware of risk in short to medium term investing, he added.
Gaurav Goel, Founder & Director at Fynocrat Technologies noted that Ather Energy IPO received a mixed response as overall demand was not very strong, especially among non-institutional investors (NII).
'In the grey market, the premium is currently modest at around ₹ 7 per share, indicating only about a ~3-5% expected gain on listing day. This is much lower compared to more hyped IPOs. We expect Ather Energy stock to list flat to marginally positive, with limited near-term upside unless the company can quickly improve its financials and scale up production after listing,' Goel said.
Ather Energy IPO opened for subscription on April 28 and closed on April 30. The IPO allotment was finalized on May 2, and Ather Energy IPO listing date is today, May 6. Ather Energy shares will be listed on BSE and NSE.
The ₹ 2,981.06-crore worth Ather Energy IPO was a combination of fresh issue of 8.18 crore equity shares amounting to ₹ 2,626.30 crore and offer for sale (OFS) of 1.11 crore equity shares aggregating to ₹ 354.76 crore. Ather Energy IPO price band was set at ₹ 321 per share.
Ather Energy IPO was subscribed by 1.43 times in total as the issue received bids for 7.65 crore equity shares as against 5.33 crore shares on the offer, according to Ather Energy IPO subscription status data on NSE.
Axis Capital, HSBC Securities & Capital Markets Pvt Ltd, JM Financial, Nomura Financial Advisory And Securities (India) Pvt Ltd are the book running lead managers of the Ather Energy IPO, while Link Intime India Private Ltd is the IPO registrar.
Disclaimer: The views and recommendations made above are those of individual analysts or broking companies, and not of Mint. We advise investors to check with certified experts before making any investment decisions.
First Published: 6 May 2025, 06:17 AM IST
Hashtags

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

The Hindu
an hour ago
- The Hindu
Infosys gets huge relief on GST as DGGI closes ₹32,400-crore pre-show cause notice
In a major relief for Infosys, the Director General of GST Intelligence has closed pre-show cause notice proceedings against the company for financial years 2018-19 to 2021-22 involving a staggering ₹32,403 crore in GST dues. The latest move effectively ends nearly a year-long GST saga for India's second-largest IT services firm. Mid-last year, the goods and services tax (GST) authorities had slapped ₹32,403 crore notice on Infosys for services availed by the company from its overseas branches for five years starting 2017. The GST demand, in fact, exceeds Infosys's annual profits — Infosys's net profit for full FY25 stood at ₹26,713 crore — and its closure now is bound to come as a significant relief for the tech major. Also Read | After ₹32,000 crore demand to Infosys, government said to mull GST notices to other IT majors The Bengaluru-headquartered company, in a BSE filing, said with the receipt of the latest communication from DGGI "this matter stands closed". 'In continuation to our earlier communications on July 31, 2024, August 1, 2024 and August 3,2024 on GST, this is to inform that the company has today received a communication from the Director General of GST Intelligence (DGGI) closing the pre-show cause notice proceedings for the financial years 2018-19 to 2021-22,' the company said in the filing late Friday (June 6, 2025) evening. Infosys, which competes with the likes of TCS, Wipro and others for global IT contracts, said it had received and responded to a pre-show cause notice issued by DGGI for the period July 2017 to March 2022 on the issue of non-payment of IGST under Reverse Charge Mechanism. 'The GST amount as per the pre-show cause notice for this period was Rs 32,403 crore. The company had on August 3, 2024 received a communication from DGGI closing the pre-show cause notice proceedings for the financial year 2017-2018. With the receipt of today's communication from DGGI, this matter stands closed,' Infosys said. Also Read | Nasscom defends Infosys, says ₹32,000-cr. GST notice shows lack of understanding of industry model In July last year, Infosys had informed that Karnataka State GST authorities issued a pre-show cause notice for payment of GST of ₹32,403 crores for the period July 2017 to March 2022 towards the expenses incurred by overseas branch offices of Infosys Ltd, and added that the company has responded to the pre-show cause notice. 'The company has also received a pre-show cause notice from Director General of GST Intelligence on the same matter and the company is in the process of responding to the same,' the filing of July 2024 had said. All along, Infosys maintained that GST is not applicable on these expenses. 'Additionally, as per a recent circular issued by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs on the recommendations of the GST Council, services provided by the overseas branches to Indian entity are not subject to GST,' Infosys had argued back in July 2024. The tech firm had asserted GST payments are eligible for credit or refund against export of IT services. 'Infosys has paid all its GST dues and is fully in compliance with the central and state regulations on this matter,' the company had contended. The document sent to Infosys by GST authorities at that point had reportedly said, 'In lieu of receipt of supplies from overseas branch offices, the company has paid consideration to the branch offices in the form of overseas branch expense. Hence, M/s Infosys Ltd, Bengaluru is liable to pay IGST under reverse charge mechanism on supplies received from branches located outside India to the tune of Rs 32,403.46 crores for the period 2017-18 (July 2017 onwards) to 2021-22.' The Directorate General of GST Intelligence in Bengaluru had been of the opinion that Infosys did not pay the Integrated-GST (IGST) on the import of services as a recipient of services. For the just-ended March quarter, Infosys reported an 11.7 per cent decline in consolidated net profit to ₹7,033 crore mainly on account of compensation to employees, and acquisitions during the reported period. The company has guided for a revenue growth of 0% to 3% in constant currency terms in the current fiscal year, citing uncertainty in the environment. For the full FY25, profits saw a marginal increase of 1.8% to ₹26,713 crore; revenues climbed 6.06% to reach ₹1,62,990 crore - exceeding its guidance of 4.5% to 5% for the full FY25.


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Local Court Lawyers Up In Arms Over Shifting Of 34 Digital Courts
New Delhi: Lawyers from the district courts decided on Saturday to roll back their decision to abstain from work in protest against the shifting of the judges of the 34 digital Negotiable Instruments Act courts to the Rouse Avenue courts. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now A statement released by the All District Courts Bar Association of Delhi on Saturday said that the lawyers' coordination committee met the chief justice of and was assured that all digital courts would function strictly as digital platforms only. The remaining proceedings and judicial work only would be conducted in the regular local courts, the statement said. "Necessary directions are being issued to all presiding officers instructing them not to insist on the physical appearance of any stakeholders, including parties, counsel, police officers, etc, in c+ourt," the statement added. On May 30, high court chief justice Devendra Kumar Upadhyaya inaugurated the 34 digital courts at the Rouse Avenue Courts complex to hear cases under the NI Act. Only judges of these courts will operate from Rouse Avenue, while the staff —readers, ahlmads and stenographers — will operate from their respective districts. The association on Friday, June 6 decided to abstain from work opposing the decision of shiftingthecourts. The digital courts deal with cases related to cheque bounces across six court complexes. The Lok Sabha was informed by the Union law minister in Dec 2024 that Delhi ranked fourth among top five Indian states with regard to NI Act cases and has 4.5 lakh pending cases. A judge in a NI Act court, on average, holds 80 hearings every day. According to the National Judicial Data Grid, until June 7, there were 15.1 lakh cases, of which 31% were cheque bounce cases. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Last year, advocate Jagriti Jain filed a public interest litigation, highlighting administrative lapses in the digital NI Act court in North district. The petition pointed out the huge pendency of cases as well as connectivity problems of the portal used for digital hearings. In April 2024, a division bench comprising then acting chief justice Manmohan and justice Manmeet Pritam Singh Arora directed steps to be taken to address the issue of digital connectivity and network problems. On May 22 this year, the bench disposed of the Jain's PIL, noting that connectivity issues had been resolved after the registrar general of the high court submitted a report on May 9 outlining the remedial measures taken. A second digital NI Act court was established in the North district and all pending matters were evenly distributed between the two courts. Advocate Parthesh Bhardwaj, who appeared for Jain, told TOI, "As of June, with multiple functioning courts, better cause list management and strengthened technical infrastructure, the average time between hearings at digital NI Act courts in all districts has significantly reduced."


New Indian Express
3 hours ago
- New Indian Express
Embed Indian carbon market in global trade context
The PAT experience Though there are several areas where PAT, launched in 2012, could be implemented better, it has created industry familiarity with a measurement, reporting and verification (MRV) mechanism and a good number of accredited energy auditors. The carbon credit trading scheme (CCTS) will reduce the PAT reporting frequency from three years to an annual basisthereby increasing the spend on the MRV as well as speed of emissions reduction. Absent renewable energy, a majority of industrial emissions emerge out of energy consumption. PAT compliance has entailed over ten years of industry efforts to reduce energy consumption. The low hanging fruit of energy intensity has already been picked. Industry majors have invested in best available technology. Without further investment in technology, can the obligated entities reduce emissions further or will they simply bear the cost of purchasing carbon credits from other better performers? Indian carbon market embedded in global decarbonisation PAT was an autonomous measure to discipline industrial energy consumption. It did not function under any multilateral pressure or even context. CCTS on the other hand will have to respond to linkages and contestation with several carbon markets. CCTS will be a tool to defend Indian industry against cheap imports as well as to gain access to carbon conscious export markets. Building the trade dimension into the Indian Carbon market is imperative to create policy and business opportunities. The PAT experience Though there are several areas where PAT, launched in 2012, could be implemented better, it has created industry familiarity with a measurement, reporting and verification (MRV) mechanism and a good number of accredited energy auditors. The carbon credit trading scheme (CCTS) will reduce the PAT reporting frequency from three years to an annual basis thereby increasing the spend on the MRV as well as speed of emissions reduction. Absent renewable energy, a majority of industrial emissions emerge out of energy consumption. PAT compliance has entailed over ten years of industry efforts to reduce energy consumption. The low hanging fruit of energy intensity has already been picked. Industry majors have invested in best available technology. Without further investment in technology, can the obligated entities reduce emissions further or will they simply bear the cost of purchasing carbon credits from other better performers? Indian carbon market embedded in global decarbonisation PAT was an autonomous measure to discipline industrial energy consumption. It did not function under any multilateral pressure or even context. CCTS on the other hand will have to respond to linkages and contestation with several carbon markets. CCTS will be a tool to defend Indian industry against cheap imports as well as to gain access to carbon conscious export markets. Building the trade dimension into the Indian Carbon market is imperative to create policy and business opportunities.