
GNG Electronics IPO allotment date soon. Latest GMP, steps to check share allotment status online
The public issue was open from July 23 to 25. GNG Electronics IPO allotment date is likely 28 July 2025, Monday. With the T+3 day listing rule, GNG Electronics IPO listing date is expected to be July 30.
The company will finalise the GNG Electronics IPO allotment status soon. Once the GNG Electronics IPO allotment status is fixed, the company will then credit the equity shares into the demat accounts of eligible allotment holders on July 29, and initiate refunds to unsuccessful bidders on the same day.
Investors can check GNG Electronics IPO allotment status online through the websites of BSE and NSE, along with the official portal of the IPO registrar. Bigshare Services Pvt Ltd is the GNG Electronics IPO registrar.
GNG Electronics IPO allotment status online check can be done by following a few steps mentioned below. Here's how to check GNG Electronics IPO allotment status online:
Step 2] Select 'Equity' in the Issue Type
Step 3] Choose 'GNG Electronics Limited' in the Issue Name dropdown menu
Step 4] Enter either Application No. or PAN
Step 5] Verify by ticking on 'I am not robot' and click on 'Search'
Your GNG Electronics IPO allotment status will be displayed on the screen.
Step 2] Select 'Equity and SME IPO bids'
Step 3] Choose 'GNG Electronics Limited' from the Issue Name dropdown menu
Step 4] Enter your PAN and Application Number
Your GNG Electronics IPO allotment status will be displayed on the screen.
Step 1] Visit the web portal of Bigshare Services here - https://ipo.bigshareonline.com/IPO_Status.html
Step 2] Select 'GNG Electronics Limited' in the Select Company dropbox
Step 3] Choose among - Application Number/CAF No, Beneficiary ID, or PAN
Step 4] Enter the details as per the option selected
Step 5] Fill the captcha and hit on 'Search'
Your GNG Electronics IPO allotment status will be displayed on the screen.
GNG Electronics shares are witnessing a strong demand in the unlisted market and are trading with a hefty grey market premium (GMP). GNG Electronics IPO GMP today is ₹ 100 per share, stock market experts said. This means that in the grey market, GNG Electronics shares are trading higher by ₹ 100 apiece than their issue price.
GNG Electronics IPO GMP today indicates that the estimated listing price of GNG Electronics shares would be ₹ 337 apiece, which is at 42.19% premium to the IPO price of ₹ 237 per share.
The public issue opened for subscription on July 23, and closed on July 25. GNG Electronics IPO allotment date is likely July 28, and the IPO listing date is expected to be July 30. GNG Electronics shares will be listed on both the stock exchanges, BSE and NSE.
GNG Electronics IPO price band was set at ₹ 237 per share. The company raised ₹ 460.43 crore from the book-building issue, which was a combination of fresh issue of 1.69 crore equity shares worth ₹ 400 crore, and an offer-for-sale (OFS) portion of 25.5 lakh equity shares aggregating to ₹ 60.44 crore.
GNG Electronics IPO has been subscribed 147.93 times in total, NSE subscription status data showed. The public issue was booked 46.84 times in the retail category, and 266.21 times in the Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIB) category. The Non-Institutional Investors (NII) portion received 227.67 times subscription.
Motilal Oswal Investment Advisors is the book-running lead manager of the GNG Electronics IPO, while Bigshare Services Pvt 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.

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


New Indian Express
35 minutes ago
- New Indian Express
Best ways to invest in gold that hit record highs in H1
Gold, which has never ceased to be the safe-haven asset so far, has gained 26% in the first half of 2025 becoming one of the top-performing major asset classes. The precious metal has scaled 26 new all-time highs during this period in global markets—including once crossing the sensitive Rs 1 lakh/10 grams mark in the domestic markets when the metal crossed $3,500/ounce-mark in the third week of April. This 26 new life-time highs came in after breaking through a 40-new-record streaks in 2024 when it had rallied 24% over a 22% rally in the previous year. What makes the metal so alluring to investors? There are many a reason, with the shining allure it has for women as a jewellery (our households are sitting over close to 26,000 tonnes of gold in jewellery alone) and its ready fungibility/encashability when in need of ready cash being the top reasons for its allurement. Let's look at some of the best ways to invest in this metal, even though investment experts recommend allocating only a small portion (5–10%) of your portfolio to precious metals. According to the World Gold Council, a combination of a weaker US dollar, range-bound interest rates and a highly uncertain geo-economic environment has resulted in strong investment demand for gold. Another equally important driver is the continuing central bank demands led by the Reserve Bank and the central bank of China among others. The council sees at least 5% more spike in prices during the course of the year and 10-15% more if current volatile economic conditions deteriorate further exacerbating stagflationary pressures—that's the metal reaching $3,840/ounce by end December and translating into an annual return of 40%. But many Wall Street watchers have predicted the metal hitting the $4,000/ounce mark by December. Experts recommend allocating only a small portion, say 5–10% of your investment portfolio to precious metals, including silver and the following are the best ways to take exposure to this metal. The easiest way is investing in sovereign gold bonds (SGBs) launched in 2015, but since last year the SGBs have been discontinued. Starting 2015, the RBI had launched 67 SGB tranches-- each being an eight-year instrument with a five-year lock-in--issuing 14.7 crore units. They were listed and traded in the cash segment of the BSE and the NSE and investors could buy and sell them through demat accounts. Gold Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) Given that no new SGBs are being issued, the best option available to own non-physical gold is to go in for gold ETFs which track the domestic physical prices of the metal. Each gold ETF unit represents the physical gold and is based on gold prices and invest in physical bullion. One gold ETF unit equals 1 gram of gold, backed by high-purity physical metal. Why ETFs? Because they are safe and have higher liquidity as they are listed and are traded every day. Though, there are brokerage charges they are way less than the making charges on physical jewellery. The expense ratio in gold ETFs is also lower than that of gold MFs. On the negative side, since ETFs track the price of gold, they are subject to volatility. To invest in an ETF, one needs to have a demat account. There are entry and exit loads and the investor has to pay brokerage every time. Gold Mutual Funds Gold mutual funds are open-ended funds that invest in the units of a gold ETF with the ultimate goal of creating wealth using the potential of gold as a commodity. Gold MF units are priced differently-- in the form of net asset value disclosed at the end of the trading session—as opposed to gold ETFs which are linked to physical prices. Since gold MFs are actively managed, they have the potential to outperform the metal price over time. They also offer the convenience of investing through a fund house. On the negatives, gold MFs take a higher expense ratio than ETFs, typically around 1-2% apart from the risk of underperformance-- the return can be lower than gold price over time. In comparison to gold ETFs, gold MFs have low minimum investment requirements, making them more accessible for retail investors. Also, you don't need a demat account to invest in this form of gold.


Mint
5 hours ago
- Mint
M-cap of 6 of top-10 top firms falls by ₹2.2 lakh crore: Check for winners and losers
The combined market valuation of six of India's top-10 most valued companies eroded by ₹ 2.22 lakh crore last week. The downturn was a result of a bearish trend in the equity market, with the BSE benchmark Sensex dropping 294.64 points or 0.36%. "Markets ended lower for the fourth straight week as caution prevailed amid mixed cues. The market's direction was initially influenced by earnings announcements, with the banking sector showing strength due to positive results from HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank. However, a dip in stocks like Reliance capped the recovery. Furthermore, foreign fund outflows and uncertainty over trade deals ahead of the August 1 deadline kept volatility high," said Ajit Mishra, SVP, Research, Religare Broking Ltd. Reliance Industries and Infosys were the worst-hit among the top 10 firms, mirroring the market downturn. These firms suffered a combined erosion of ₹ 2,22,193.17 crore from their market valuation. Here are the firms who were the most affected due to the trend: Reliance Industries: The valuation of the largest company by market cap tumbled ₹ 1,14,688 crore to ₹ 18,83,856 crore, the most during the period. 1,14,688 crore to 18,83,856 crore, the most during the period. Infosys: The tech giant faced an erosion of ₹ 29,475 crore to ₹ 6,29,622 crore from its market capitalisation. 29,475 crore to 6,29,622 crore from its market capitalisation. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS): Its m-cap dropped by ₹ 20,080 crore to ₹ 11,34,035 crore. Bajaj Finance: The m-cap of the firm declined by ₹ 17,524 crore to ₹ 5,67,769 crore 17,524 crore to 5,67,769 crore Hindustan Unilever: The company's valuation fell by ₹ 17,340 crore to ₹ 5,67,450 crore. 17,340 crore to 5,67,450 crore. Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC): The valuation of LIC tanked ₹ 23,087 crore to ₹ 5,60,743 crore HDFC Bank: The bank's market valuation jumped ₹ 37,162 crore to ₹ 15,38,079 crore. 37,162 crore to 15,38,079 crore. Bharti Airtel: The m-cap of firm climbed ₹ 20,841 crore to ₹ 11,04,840 crore 20,841 crore to 11,04,840 crore ICICI Bank: The bank also registered gains by adding ₹ 35,814 crore, taking its valuation to ₹ 10,53,823 crore. State Bank of India: Its valuation went up by ₹ 9,685.34 crore to ₹ 7,44,449.31 crore. Reliance Industries retained the title of the most valued firm of India, followed by HDFC Bank, TCS, Bharti Airtel, ICICI Bank, State Bank of India, Infosys, Bajaj Finance, Hindustan Unilever and LIC.


Mint
7 hours ago
- Mint
M-cap of 6 of top-10 top firms falls by ₹2.2 lakh crore: Check for winners and losers
The combined market valuation of six of India's top-10 most valued companies eroded by ₹ 2.22 lakh crore last week. The downturn was a result of a bearish trend in the equity market, with the BSE benchmark Sensex dropping 294.64 points or 0.36%. "Markets ended lower for the fourth straight week as caution prevailed amid mixed cues. The market's direction was initially influenced by earnings announcements, with the banking sector showing strength due to positive results from HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank. However, a dip in stocks like Reliance capped the recovery. Furthermore, foreign fund outflows and uncertainty over trade deals ahead of the August 1 deadline kept volatility high," said Ajit Mishra, SVP, Research, Religare Broking Ltd. Reliance Industries and Infosys were the worst-hit among the top 10 firms, mirroring the market downturn. These firms suffered a combined erosion of ₹ 2,22,193.17 crore from their market valuation. Here are the firms who were the most affected due to the trend: Reliance Industries: The valuation of the largest company by market cap tumbled ₹ 1,14,688 crore to ₹ 18,83,856 crore, the most during the period. 1,14,688 crore to 18,83,856 crore, the most during the period. Infosys: The tech giant faced an erosion of ₹ 29,475 crore to ₹ 6,29,622 crore from its market capitalisation. 29,475 crore to 6,29,622 crore from its market capitalisation. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS): Its m-cap dropped by ₹ 20,080 crore to ₹ 11,34,035 crore. Bajaj Finance: The m-cap of the firm declined by ₹ 17,524 crore to ₹ 5,67,769 crore 17,524 crore to 5,67,769 crore Hindustan Unilever: The company's valuation fell by ₹ 17,340 crore to ₹ 5,67,450 crore. 17,340 crore to 5,67,450 crore. Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC): The valuation of LIC tanked ₹ 23,087 crore to ₹ 5,60,743 crore HDFC Bank: The bank's market valuation jumped ₹ 37,162 crore to ₹ 15,38,079 crore. 37,162 crore to 15,38,079 crore. Bharti Airtel: The m-cap of firm climbed ₹ 20,841 crore to ₹ 11,04,840 crore 20,841 crore to 11,04,840 crore ICICI Bank: The bank also registered gains by adding ₹ 35,814 crore, taking its valuation to ₹ 10,53,823 crore. State Bank of India: Its valuation went up by ₹ 9,685.34 crore to ₹ 7,44,449.31 crore. Reliance Industries retained the title of the most valued firm of India, followed by HDFC Bank, TCS, Bharti Airtel, ICICI Bank, State Bank of India, Infosys, Bajaj Finance, Hindustan Unilever and LIC. Disclaimer: This story is for educational purposes only. The views and recommendations above are those of individual analysts or broking companies, not Mint. We advise investors to check with certified experts before making any investment decisions.