IPOs & Listings Neutral 5

Aastha Spintex IPO Opens at 18.8x FY25 Earnings: GMP Signals 4% Listing Pop

· 4 min read · Verified by 2 sources ·
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Key Takeaways

  • Aastha Spintex's Rs 170 cr IPO opens today with a GMP of 4%.
  • Broker Swastika Investmart gives 'Subscribe' rating, highlighting capacity doubling via Falcon Yarns acquisition.
  • Issue priced at 125-136/share, closing July 1.

Mentioned

Aastha Spintex company Falcon Yarns company Twinkle Papers company Swastika Investmart company Novus Capital Advisors company BSE company NSE company

Key Intelligence

Key Facts

  1. 1Aastha Spintex IPO size is Rs 170 crore, price band Rs 125–136, GMP ~4%, closing July 1, 2026.
  2. 2Twinkle Papers IPO size Rs 27.5 crore, price band Rs 64–69, GMP ~13%, listing July 6 on BSE SME.
  3. 3Aastha's total income grew from Rs 239.7 crore (FY23) to Rs 352.2 crore (FY25); net profit jumped from Rs 1.1 crore to Rs 22.9 crore.
  4. 4Acquisition of Falcon Yarns will more than double Aastha's spinning capacity from 7,700 MT to 17,457 MT annually.
  5. 5Swastika Investmart rates Aastha 'Subscribe' for medium- to long-term, citing capacity expansion but warns of cotton price and single-facility risks.
  6. 6Twinkle Papers' revenue rose to Rs 83.98 crore in FY25 from Rs 58.75 crore in FY24; PAT doubled to Rs 3.33 crore.
IPO Size
Rs 170 Cr Fresh Issue

Aastha Spintex entirely primary issuance

The acquisition of Falcon Yarns is expected to more than double spinning capacity and support future growth. The company's improving profitability makes it a Subscribe for medium- to long-term investors.

Swastika Investmart Brokerage

IPO note

Market Sentiment
Metric
IPO Size Rs 170 Cr Rs 27.5 Cr
Price Band Rs 125-136 Rs 64-69
GMP ~4% ~13%
FY25 Revenue Rs 352.2 Cr Rs 83.98 Cr
Listing Platform BSE, NSE BSE SME

Analysis

For investors eyeing the SME space, Aastha Spintex offers a cotton yarn play with strong earnings growth—profit surged 20x in two years—but at a valuation of 18.8x FY25 earnings, the modest 4% grey market premium suggests near-term listing gains may be limited. The real value lies in the post-acquisition scale-up, as capacity doubles to 17,457 MT.

India's primary market saw a double-header on June 29, 2026, as two Gujarat-based SMEs—Aastha Spintex and Twinkle Papers—opened their initial public offerings for subscription on the same day. The Rs 170-crore Aastha Spintex IPO grabbed attention with its strategic acquisition-funded growth plan, while the smaller Rs 27.5-crore Twinkle Papers issue highlighted the vibrancy of the SME listing platform. Both issues signal the continued appetite of manufacturing companies to tap public markets, yet they present sharply different risk-return profiles for investors.

In contrast, Twinkle Papers—a packaging products maker—carried a GMP of 13% on its Rs 64–69 price band, suggesting stronger near-term demand.

Aastha Spintex, a Halvad-based cotton yarn manufacturer, priced its shares at Rs 125–136 apiece, valuing the company at approximately 18.8 times its FY25 earnings. The entire issue is a fresh equity sale, with proceeds earmarked for acquiring Falcon Yarns (the key growth catalyst) and funding its working capital. The grey market premium (GMP) hovered around 4% as subscriptions opened, indicating modest listing gains if sentiment holds. In contrast, Twinkle Papers—a packaging products maker—carried a GMP of 13% on its Rs 64–69 price band, suggesting stronger near-term demand. Twinkle's IPO, led by Novus Capital Advisors, will list on the BSE SME platform on July 6, while Aastha's listing date is yet to be announced on BSE and NSE.

Aastha's financial trajectory has been remarkable. Total income rose from Rs 239.7 crore in FY23 to Rs 352.2 crore in FY25, with net profit surging from Rs 1.1 crore to Rs 22.9 crore. The acquisition of Falcon Yarns is set to more than double spinning capacity from 7,700 MT to 17,457 MT annually, a transformative step that could accelerate revenue growth. However, the company remains exposed to cotton price volatility, relies on a single manufacturing facility, and depends on a key reseller outside Gujarat for a significant portion of sales. Swastika Investmart assigned a 'Subscribe' rating for medium- to long-term investors, betting on the capacity expansion to drive future earnings.

Twinkle Papers, while smaller, has demonstrated consistent growth. Revenue climbed from Rs 58.75 crore in FY24 to Rs 83.98 crore in FY25, and profit after tax more than doubled to Rs 3.33 crore. For the nine months ended December 2025, it posted Rs 73.13 crore in total income and Rs 5.4 crore in net profit. The company manufactures corrugated boxes, HDPE drums, crates, and moulded furniture under the Twinkle brand, serving food, pharma, and construction sectors. Its ISO 9001:2015-certified facilities use blow moulding, injection moulding, and rotational moulding. IPO proceeds will support expansion plans.

What to Watch

The contrast in GMPs underscores a key IPO market dynamic: near-term listing pop often reflects brand recall and sectoral buzz rather than pure fundamentals. Aastha Spintex's textile exposure and cotton-price risks temper the grey market enthusiasm despite its steep earnings growth and acquisition-driven scale-up. Twinkle's higher GMP may be driven by its diversified packaging end-markets and the relatively smaller issue size, which tends to amplify demand. Both IPOs close on July 1, and retail investors must weigh the headline GMPs against the long-term business quality.

From an industry perspective, the SME IPO space continues to mature, providing a viable exit and growth capital avenue for traditional manufacturing businesses. The double listing underscores the broadening base of companies accessing public funds, away from the tech-dominated narrative of earlier years. For policy makers, the robust pipeline supports the vision of deepening India's capital markets and channeling savings into productive assets. Still, investors should be mindful that SME IPOs carry higher liquidity risk and lower analyst coverage, requiring thorough due diligence on promoter credentials and end-market demand. As both issues play out over the coming week, their subscription figures will offer a real-time gauge of retail and institutional appetite for manufacturing SMEs in mid-2026.

Sources

Sources

Based on 2 source articles

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