Devyani International shares are trading at a grey market premium of ₹58 ahead of the company's mainboard IPO opening this week. The unofficial secondary market pricing suggests institutional appetite for India's largest franchisee of Yum! Brands—operating 294 Pizza Hut stores and 258 KFC outlets across the country as of March 2021.
The GMP represents demand from high-net-worth individuals and family offices seeking early exposure before retail subscription opens. Grey market participants typically include private wealth desks and treasury operations at non-bank financials, who assess IPO allocations as short-duration positioning rather than long-term holdings. The ₹58 premium on an issue priced between ₹86–90 per share translates to a 64–67% pop over the upper price band—a figure that reflects both pre-listing scarcity and the structural tailwind behind organized QSR penetration in Tier II and Tier III Indian cities.
Devyani operates under a master franchise model across 1,700+ stores spanning Pizza Hut, KFC, Costa Coffee, and Vaango. Revenue for FY21 stood at ₹1,838 crore, down 28% year-over-year due to pandemic-related closures, but EBITDA margins recovered to 18.2% by Q4. The company's store-level economics depend on real estate negotiation leverage and delivery aggregator commissions—two variables that have compressed industry-wide gross margins by 200–300 basis points since 2019. Zomato and Swiggy now account for 35–40% of Devyani's sales mix, up from negligible levels three years ago.
The IPO comes six months after Jubilant FoodWorks—Domino's master franchisee in India—traded up 180% from its March 2020 lows, resetting QSR valuations higher. Family offices and crossover funds are pricing in 15–18% same-store sales growth over the next 24 months, contingent on urban mobility returning to pre-COVID baseline by September 2021. The key risk remains rent obligations: Devyani carries ₹465 crore in lease liabilities, with ₹120 crore due within twelve months. Any delay in reopening velocity will compress free cash flow and force either equity dilution or sale-leaseback arrangements with REITs.
Allocators should watch store reopening cadence in Maharashtra and Karnataka, which together represent 38% of Devyani's outlet count. The company has committed to adding 100–120 net new stores annually through FY24, implying ₹250–300 crore in capex each year. Whether that expansion targets metros or smaller cities will determine margin trajectory: Tier II stores carry 12–15% lower rent but require 18–24 months to break even versus 10–12 months in metros. Separately, Costa Coffee's India master franchise was acquired in March 2020 for £18.5 million—a bet that hinges on premiumization in corporate corridors and airport retail, both of which remain structurally impaired.
The grey market premium reflects conviction that India's QSR sector will double penetration by 2025. Devyani's valuation at 30–35x forward EBITDA will either compress or expand based on same-store sales growth reported in the September quarter—data due mid-October 2021.