NSE IPO DRHP: Rs 1,491-cr settlement, Rs 857-cr claim
NSE’s DRHP puts legacy cases back in focus
National Stock Exchange of India (NSE) has disclosed in its draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) that two long-pending regulatory matters linked to its co-location and dark fibre facilities are still not closed. The exchange has proposed revised settlement amounts aggregating Rs 1,491.21 crore to resolve these cases with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI). NSE also disclosed a separate, long-running competition law dispute with the Metropolitan Stock Exchange of India Ltd. (MSEI), which is seeking Rs 857 crore in compensation. These items appear in the material litigation section of the IPO papers and relate to proceedings before the Supreme Court, SEBI, and other judicial forums. The disclosures matter because these cases have been closely watched in the context of NSE’s long-delayed listing plans. NSE’s DRHP frames the matters as pending, with approvals and legal processes still in progress. The document also flags that the eventual cash outflow on the SEBI settlements may be lower due to money already deposited with the regulator.
What the IPO papers say is still unresolved
The DRHP says the Supreme Court appeals and settlement applications connected to both co-location matters remain pending. NSE’s filings describe the matters as unresolved despite settlement proposals being on the table. In the competition law dispute, the DRHP notes both the appeal against the competition law ruling and MSEI’s compensation claim continue to remain pending. The MSEI dispute is described as arising from allegations that NSE abused its dominant position through predatory pricing in the currency derivatives segment. NSE’s disclosures place these items alongside other material litigations typically expected in IPO documentation. The DRHP does not state a final settlement order has been passed for the SEBI cases, and it does not state the competition claim has been adjudicated. The overall message is that the exchange is still navigating regulatory and legal processes that have been active for years. Investors reading the DRHP are therefore being asked to assess known monetary proposals and claims, while acknowledging the cases are not yet closed.
Co-location and dark fibre: the revised settlement proposal
According to the DRHP, the revised settlement proposals for the two matters together amount to Rs 1,491.21 crore. The cases relate to NSE’s co-location and dark fibre facilities, which have been under regulatory scrutiny for several years. Separate reporting cited in the provided material indicates a higher figure has also been discussed at the regulator level. Moneycontrol reported on April 21 that SEBI’s High-Powered Advisory Committee (HPAC) had cleared a proposal with a total settlement amount of around Rs 1,880 crore. However, the same reporting also noted the settlement was still pending before a panel of SEBI Whole-Time Members (WTMs) for final approval. In other words, the DRHP contains one set of revised proposal numbers, while external reporting points to a potentially higher settlement amount recommended by SEBI’s internal processes. NSE’s IPO papers, as described here, primarily establish that the matters remain unresolved and that settlement steps are under way.
Where the SEBI and Supreme Court processes stand
The DRHP states both the Supreme Court appeals and the SEBI settlement applications remain pending. That means closure depends not only on the regulator’s settlement mechanism but also on the status of proceedings before the Supreme Court. The supplied reporting also says the HPAC recommendation, where applicable, moves to SEBI’s WTMs for a final decision. Until a final settlement order is issued and the related legal steps are completed, the cases remain open in a formal sense. This sequencing matters because it affects the timing and certainty of any final payment requirement. The disclosures do not provide a definitive timeline for when the pending approvals will conclude. But they clearly position the settlement track as ongoing, not completed.
Deposit with SEBI could reduce incremental cash outflow
NSE has said its eventual cash outflow for the co-location and dark fibre settlements could be lower because a substantial amount is already deposited with SEBI and may be adjusted under the final settlement. As per results published in August 2024, the deposit with SEBI was around Rs 1,107 crore. The DRHP-linked disclosure highlighted in the provided text notes that this deposited amount is subject to adjustment under the final settlement. This point is important because the headline settlement proposal (Rs 1,491.21 crore) does not necessarily translate into an equal incremental payout if adjustment is permitted. The final cash impact, however, depends on the settlement terms approved by SEBI and the eventual settlement order.
The MSEI competition case and the Rs 857 crore claim
Separately, NSE disclosed a long-pending competition law dispute with MSEI (formerly MCX Stock Exchange). The dispute arises from allegations that NSE abused its dominant position through predatory pricing in the currency derivatives segment. MSEI is seeking Rs 857 crore in compensation, according to the DRHP disclosure described in the provided text. The DRHP also states that both the appeal against the competition law ruling and MSEI’s compensation claim continue to remain pending. This keeps the litigation risk open-ended until the appeal and compensation aspects are resolved through the relevant forums. The IPO disclosures do not indicate that NSE has accepted liability for the compensation claim, only that the claim exists and proceedings continue.
SBI’s planned offer for sale: key numbers from the DRHP
Apart from litigation, the provided excerpts also highlight an investor-specific disclosure around State Bank of India’s (SBI) proposed divestment in the IPO. At an assumed IPO price of Rs 2,000 per share, SBI would sell shares worth about Rs 4,950 crore, according to the DRHP disclosure cited. SBI plans to divest 2.475 crore shares through the offer for sale (OFS). The lender’s weighted average acquisition cost is disclosed as about Rs 0.80 per share, reflecting decades of share issuances, bonus allotments and capital restructuring. The same disclosure says that at Rs 2,000 per share, the stake being sold would be worth nearly Rs 4,950 crore, implying a notional gain of about Rs 4,948 crore. The assumed IPO price is a scenario used in the disclosure and does not represent a final offer price.
Key figures disclosed across settlement and claims
SBI OFS snapshot from the disclosures
Market impact and why these disclosures matter
For investors tracking NSE’s listing path, the DRHP’s litigation section provides a consolidated view of outstanding regulatory and legal items that could influence timelines, cash outflows, and risk assessment. The Rs 1,491.21 crore settlement proposal is a concrete number attached to pending matters, while the Rs 1,107 crore deposit with SEBI suggests the incremental payment could be lower if adjustment is allowed. At the same time, external reporting referenced in the provided material points to a higher settlement amount (around Rs 1,880 crore) being cleared by HPAC, with final approval pending before SEBI’s WTMs. The competition law dispute adds another layer of uncertainty, given the Rs 857 crore compensation claim remains unresolved and is under appeal. Separately, the SBI OFS disclosure illustrates how long-term shareholders may crystallise gains depending on the eventual IPO pricing and structure. Taken together, these points help investors understand what is known from official filings versus what is still subject to regulatory and judicial decisions.
Conclusion: pending approvals remain the key variable
NSE’s DRHP makes clear that the co-location and dark fibre matters are not yet settled, even though revised settlement proposals total Rs 1,491.21 crore and a substantial deposit is already with SEBI. The same filing also flags that MSEI’s Rs 857 crore compensation claim and related appeal are still pending. The next procedural milestones described in the provided material lie with SEBI’s internal decision-making, including final consideration by Whole-Time Members, alongside the pending Supreme Court appeals. Any final cash outflow and closure will depend on the settlement order and any adjustment of the Rs 1,107 crore deposit already made with SEBI.
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