
Groww, India’s largest stockbroker by active users, filed for its IPO on May 26. The Bengaluru-based fintech firm aims for a valuation between $7 billion and $8 billion. This puts the IPO size roughly between $700 million and $920 million, assuming a typical 10-15% equity sale. But is this valuation too ambitious in today’s tricky trading environment?
What This Means for Everyday Investors
For the average investor, Groww’s IPO could be a chance to own a slice of a company that helped millions start their investing journey. But the timing isn’t perfect.

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) has introduced stricter rules on Futures & Options (F&O) trading, hitting the broking industry hard. Since late last year, retail F&O volumes have shrunk, and trading taxes have increased, squeezing revenues for brokers like Groww.
Angel One, a publicly listed peer with similar revenue, reported a 49% drop in net profit for the quarter ending March 2025. This shows how painful the current regulations are for brokers. Several firms expect their top lines to drop 30-50% in the second half of FY25.
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Why Groww’s Valuation Still Commands Respect
Despite these challenges, Groww’s valuation has reasons to stand tall. Unlike many brokers who rely heavily on F&O trading, Groww has a more diversified business model.
It began by focusing on mutual funds and long-term investments before adding direct equity trading. This approach attracted 5 million new active investors in 2024 alone.
Groww doubled its consolidated revenue to over Rs 3,100 crore in FY24 and reported consistent operational profits for two years running. The company also owns Groww Mutual Fund AMC and recently acquired Indiabulls AMC, expanding its financial services.
This capital-efficient growth and diversified offering make Groww different from competitors like Zerodha, whose business depends more on F&O. Analysts believe Groww’s broad strategy could help it weather market volatility better.
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But Challenges Loom Large
Still, Groww faces stiff competition. Over 30 brokers have more than 100,000 active users each, including major banks launching low-fee apps. In financial services, innovation is easy to copy, and building a lasting moat is tough.
Plus, the IPO market is wary of giving brokers the sky-high multiples seen by companies like Zomato or Swiggy. A public investor noted that unlike food delivery, the broking industry doesn’t have the same disruptive monopoly, making valuation tricky.
The Road Ahead
Groww’s leadership hopes to prove doubters wrong with new products and acquisitions like the $150 million deal for wealth management startup Fisdom. If successful, Groww could build a more rounded financial ecosystem.
For now, the $7-8 billion valuation looks conservative by new economy standards but bold given the regulatory hurdles. As SEBI’s F&O rules reshape the landscape, Groww’s IPO will be a key test of investor appetite for India’s fintech growth story.
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