According to m.economictimes.com, India’s logistics sector is entering a significant IPO cycle, with multiple firms filing draft red herring prospectuses (DRHPs) with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) to collectively raise an estimated ₹8,000–9,000 crore over the next few quarters.
Leading Candidates and Fundraising Scale
The pipeline includes Horizon Industrial Parks, Leap India, Shiprocket, Skyways Air Services, CJ Darcl Logistics, Caliber Mining & Logistics, and Yatayat Corporation India Ltd. Horizon Industrial Parks is expected to anchor the wave with a planned issue size of around ₹2,600 crore, followed by Leap India Ltd and Shiprocket — each targeting approximately ₹2,400 crore. Skyways Air Services, CJ Darcl Logistics, and Yatayat Corporation India are slated for mid-sized offerings.
Regulatory Progress and Market Timing
Skyways Air Services, CJ Darcl Logistics, Leap India, Caliber Mining & Logistics, and Shiprocket have already received regulatory approval to launch their IPOs. The timing coincides with strengthening demand visibility across e-commerce, manufacturing, and infrastructure sectors — driven by robust consumption trends and industrial activity, according to Deep Shah, senior manager at Unistone Capital Pvt Ltd.
Operational Pressures and Investor Caution
Logistics firms are also navigating rising operational complexity: global geopolitical tensions, disruptions in key trade routes, higher freight and insurance costs, and fuel price volatility are prompting companies to recalibrate pricing strategies and optimize operations.
“Achieving India’s projected growth trajectory will be difficult without a meaningful scale up of the logistics eco system, which in turn requires access to growth capital.” — Dharmesh Mehta, managing director & CEO, DAM Capital Advisors
“The market has a longer memory now. Logistics remains a great sector, but pricing needs to reflect the capital intensity honestly.” — Dev Chandrasekhar, partner at Transcendum
The valuation benchmark casting a shadow over the current pipeline is Delhivery, which raised ₹5,235 crore in its May 2022 IPO but traded below its issue price for nearly two years before recovering — a precedent likely to make institutional investors more selective.
Practitioner Implications
For global supply chain professionals, this IPO wave signals both opportunity and due diligence pressure. As Indian logistics providers scale capacity — particularly in last-mile delivery, warehousing, and multimodal integration — international shippers and procurement teams may see expanded service options and regional cost efficiencies. However, the capital intensity of logistics infrastructure means balance sheet strength, capex discipline, and route-level profitability metrics will become critical evaluation criteria when selecting or auditing Indian partners. The emphasis on regulatory approvals and post-IPO performance transparency also underscores growing investor expectations for ESG-aligned governance and supply chain visibility — especially amid tightening global compliance standards.
Source: m.economictimes.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










