Reliance Jio Infocomm will file its draft red herring prospectus with Indian regulators this week, marking the formal start of what is set to become India's largest initial public offering. The filing ends 36 months of market speculation that began when Mukesh Ambani first signaled his intent to separate the telecom and retail divisions from Reliance Industries' consolidated structure. No price range has been disclosed, but pre-IPO investor presentations circulated in May referenced a $112 billion enterprise valuation for the wireless carrier.
The DRHP submission triggers a 90-to-120-day Securities and Exchange Board of India review process, placing the earliest possible listing in late September. Jio operates 490 million wireless subscribers across India, representing 37% market share by customer count and 41% by data traffic as of March. The company recorded ₹1.09 trillion in revenue for the fiscal year ending March 2025, with EBITDA margins at 51.2%—a figure that places it in the top decile of global mobile operators by profitability. Parent company Reliance Industries holds 66.7% equity in Jio following internal restructuring completed in December.
The filing matters because it converts a long-dated structural story into near-term tradable events with specific calendar anchors. Sum-of-the-parts revaluation typically begins during the SEBI comment period, not at listing, as institutional allocators rebuild position limits and sector analysts issue standalone coverage. Reliance Industries shares have traded at a 15-18% conglomerate discount to the sum of its telecom, retail, and energy segments for the past 18 months, measured by comparable-company multiples. That gap narrows mechanically as soon as a subsidiary files for separation, because the uncertainty shifts from *whether* to *when* and *at what price*. The Jio filing also unlocks a second catalyst: retail arm Reliance Retail, which Ambani has committed to listing *after* Jio. The sequencing is deliberate—proving execution on the telecom IPO removes structural doubt about the retail listing, and allocators price that forward optionality immediately.
Watch three specific follow-on events. First, the SEBI comment letter, expected 4-6 weeks after filing, will clarify whether regulators require additional financial disclosures around related-party transactions with Reliance Industries or adjustments to the lock-up structure for promoter shares. Second, the cornerstone investor list, which Indian regulations require be disclosed 2 weeks before the roadshow begins. Sovereign wealth funds and large crossover accounts typically anchor these issues, and their presence—or absence—signals how international allocators are pricing India telecom exposure against alternatives in Southeast Asia. Third, grey market premiums, which begin trading 48 hours after the price band is set. Indian grey markets are illiquid but directionally predictive; premiums above 12% in recent large-cap tech IPOs have correlated with first-day pops above 20%.
The filing lands in a week when India's Nifty 50 sits 3.2% below its January highs and foreign institutional investors have been net sellers for 11 consecutive sessions, removing $4.7 billion from Indian equities. That makes timing worth noting—not because it signals hesitation, but because Reliance and its bookrunners are moving forward regardless of near-term sentiment. The company has already secured $3.8 billion in pre-IPO commitments from KKR and Silver Lake at the reference valuation, providing a price floor that insulates the public offering from month-to-month flows.