Byju’s Unlisted Shares: Key Risks and Valuation Insights
Once India’s edtech darling valued at $22 billion, Byju’s now teeters on the edge amid insolvency woes. Unlisted shares trading at steep discounts reflects this crash, but investors face big pitfalls.
Valuation Drop From a 2022 peak of $22B, Byju’s valuation plunged to $0.5B-$1B by 2025 due to debts exceeding $2.5B. Subsidiaries like Aakash hold some value ($700M+), but parent company liabilities wipe out equity gains.
Major Risks Insolvency Proceedings: Supreme Court upheld NCLT’s process; settlements need creditor approval, freezing asset sales. business-standard
Illiquidity & Manipulation: No public trading means hard exits; prices swing on rumors, insider info.
Transparency Gaps: Delayed financials (no reports for years) hide true health; high debt-to-equity ratio amplifies volatility.
Legal Battles: Lender disputes, unpaid dues (e.g., BCCI), and governance issues erode trust. economic times.
Steer clear unless high-risk tolerant—stick to listed stocks for safety
Liquidity Challenges Unlisted markets lack exchanges, so selling means broker networks with wide bid-ask spreads. Recent trades hover at ₹10-50/share vs. face value ₹2,000+, but volumes are thin amid insolvency stays.
Current Price & Performance
Shares hit a 52-week high of ₹14 before settling lower, with market cap near ₹1,600-4,900 crore. Losses persist (FY25 revenue ₹4.3 crore, PAT -₹34 crore), yielding negative ROE (-9%) and P/E (-45). Yet, zero debt and strong backers like banks fuel optimism for listing or product launches.
Debt Overhang $2.5B+ liabilities dwarf assets; creditors like Proses push for recovery, diluting equity holders. Aakash unit shines ($700M+ bids), but parent guarantees tie it down.
Regulatory Hurdles
- SEBI scrutiny on unlisted trading platforms flags manipulation risks.
- NCLT freezes dividends, buybacks; resolution could take years.
- Forex violations and auditor resignations signal governance red flags.
Investor Tips Diversify away from unicorns in distress. Track NCLT updates, demand audited books before buying. High-reward? Maybe post-restructuring—but patience required.