WeWork India shares slip over 5% after flat listing on debut. What should investors do?

Shares of WeWork India stumbled on their stock market debut on Friday, sliding as much as 5.5% after listing flat and offering no immediate gains to investors.

The stock opened at Rs 646.50 on the BSE, slightly below its IPO price of Rs 648, and at Rs 650 on the NSE, a modest premium of 0.3%. Early trading saw the stock dip to an intraday low of Rs 614.25 on the NSE, while on the BSE, it fell to Rs 615, down 4.9% from its opening price.

IPO response: Mixed investor appetite

WeWork India’s Rs 3,000-crore Initial Public Offering (IPO) was fully subscribed at 1.15 times, though the response from retail and non-institutional investors was lukewarm.

Retail Individual Investors (RIIs) subscribed 61% of their allotted 46.23 lakh shares, while Non-Institutional Investors (NIIs) accounted for just 23% of their 69.35 lakh share allocation. Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs) drove the subscription, oversubscribing their portion 1.79 times.

The IPO was structured entirely as an Offer-for-Sale (OFS), meaning the company will not raise fresh capital; proceeds will go to existing shareholders, including Embassy Group and WeWork Global, which also continues as the brand licensor and investor in India. The price band was set at Rs 615–648 per share, and the issue closed on October 7.

Grey market cues and broader market context

Ahead of listing, the Grey Market Premium (GMP) was a modest 0.77% above the issue price, reflecting muted short-term investor excitement.

The debut comes amid a busy week for India’s primary market, with LG Electronics India’s IPO seeing a 54.02 times subscription and Tata Capital drawing $1.24 billion in bids.

What do analysts say?

WeWork India’s IPO debuted flat, shadowed by heavy legal scrutiny and muted investor interest due to governance and disclosure concerns, said Khushi Mistry, Research Analyst at Bonanza.

“WeWork India’s listing, amid unresolved legal and governance headwinds, demands heightened caution. Sustainable optimism will require visible progress on compliance, promoter conduct, and clarity from ongoing court proceedings before any substantive rerating or long-term bet,” said Mistry.

Company growth and valuation

Founded in 2017, WeWork India operates 68 premium flexible workspaces across eight cities, spanning 7.35 million sq. ft., serving blue-chip clients such as JP Morgan, Amazon, and Uber. Enterprise tenants account for nearly 60% of the portfolio, well above the industry average.

The company has also delivered a financial turnaround in recent years. Revenue rose from Rs 1,314 crore in FY23 to Rs 1,949 crore in FY25, while profits swung from a Rs 147-crore loss to a Rs 128-crore net gain over the same period. Adjusted EBITDA margins reached 21.6% in FY25, indicating operational efficiency.

However, the IPO valuation comes at a premium, with the offer priced at 65 times FY25 earnings at the upper end of the band. Listed peer Awfis Space trades at a P/E of 58x, while other competitors like Smartworks and Indiqube remain unprofitable.

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