Reliance Jio Infocomm will file its Draft Red Herring Prospectus with SEBI this week, initiating India's largest-ever initial public offering and activating the pre-listing mechanics that matter more than the eventual float. The filing lands with Reliance Industries trading at ₹1,340 per share, a $112 billion market capitalization that embeds minimal value separation between telecom, retail, and energy divisions.
The DRHP converts speculation into operational timeline. SEBI review typically runs 90-120 days for large-cap filings. Roadshow season follows immediately after clearance. Listing mechanics — anchor book, retail oversubscription, grey-market premium — begin generating daily price discovery for a business unit that currently exists only as a consolidated line item. Reliance has not disclosed exact stake percentage for sale, but comparable Jio Platforms minority rounds in 2020 valued the digital services business at $65-70 billion pre-money. Current subscriber count sits at 490 million, up 22 million year-over-year, with ARPU at ₹195 per month.
The mechanics matter more than the event. Conglomerate parents with diversified asset bases trade at 15-25% holdco discounts until a subsidiary files for separation. The DRHP filing typically closes half that gap within 60 days as sell-side analysts rebuild sum-of-the-parts models with real comparables and institutional allocators begin pre-IPO positioning in the parent to capture the unlock. Reliance trades at 11.2x forward EBITDA across all divisions; Bharti Airtel, the telecom comp, trades at 14.8x on a standalone basis. A clean Jio separation — even at 10-15% float — forces that multiple arbitrage into daily marks.
Three follow-on catalysts deserve watch. First, anchor book allocation, which typically closes 48 hours before retail open and signals institutional appetite at disclosed price bands. Second, any pre-IPO strategic stake sale to a sovereign wealth fund or technology partner, which would set a hard valuation floor. Third, Reliance's decision on dividend policy post-separation — the parent has historically retained cash for capex, but a Jio listing with independent cash generation could shift that calculus. All three events carry specific timeline triggers within the next 120-150 days.
The filing also resolves a two-year coordination problem. Reliance Industries has operated Jio as a fully consolidated subsidiary while simultaneously pitching it as India's digital infrastructure play to foreign capital. That structure worked for private rounds — Facebook, Google, and KKR collectively deployed $20 billion into Jio Platforms in 2020 — but created valuation friction as the parent's stock price absorbed oil volatility and petrochemical margin compression. A public Jio with daily liquidity and independent analyst coverage removes that cross-contamination. The business either earns its telecom multiple or it does not, without quarterly energy earnings calls muddying the signal.