Sawaliya Food Products IPO: GMP & Key Details (August 09, 2025)
Sawaliya Food Products IPO:
Grey Market Premium (GMP) & Latest Updates
As of August 09, 2025, the Grey Market Premium (GMP) for Sawaliya Food Products IPO stands at ₹0 per share. This indicates the estimated listing price is expected to be close to the IPO upper price band of ₹120, suggesting minimal to no listing gain according to current market sentiment.
Key IPO Details
IPO Open Dates: August 7, 2025 to August 11, 2025
Price Band: ₹114 to ₹120 per share
Lot Size: 2,400 shares (Minimum investment approx. ₹2,88,000)
Total Issue Size: ₹34.83 crore (Fresh issue of 26.03 lakh shares + Offer for sale of 3 lakh shares)
Allotment Date: August 12, 2025
Listing Date: August 14, 2025
Listing: NSE SME platform
Face Value: ₹10 per share
Business Overview
Sawaliya Food Products Limited specializes in manufacturing and processing dehydrated vegetables such as carrot, cabbage, and string beans, serving major food brands and international importers. Their products find wide use as ingredients in FMCG products like noodles, pasta, and soups. The company focuses on quality and sustainability, sourcing raw materials directly from farmers.
IPO Objectives
To expand production capacity through machinery upgrades and new installations at Pithampur, Madhya Pradesh
To implement an on-grid rooftop solar photovoltaic system to improve energy efficiency
To strengthen working capital for raw material procurement
To repay or prepay borrowings to improve financial health
To support general corporate purposes
Subscription & Market Sentiment
The IPO received a good subscription on Day 1, with an overall subscription of 1.78 times. Institutional investor subscription remains cautious, while non-institutional investors showed strong participation.
Analyst Review & Outlook
The current GMP of ₹0 suggests modest listing gains, reflecting cautious investor expectations.
The company’s strong fundamentals and growth potential in the dehydrated vegetables market are positives.
Investors should consider the relatively high minimum investment and sector dynamics before applying.