Indian ethnic wear retailer Libas is aiming to go public by early next financial year, but the timing of its market debut may slip if equity markets remain volatile.
The company is also stepping up store expansion, weighing a potential private equity round and assessing how geopolitical tensions, including the US-Iran conflict, could affect sentiment and costs.
The broader story is one of a fast-growing fashion retailer trying to balance ambition with caution.
Libas wants to scale quickly in India, test overseas opportunities and prepare for a public listing, but it is doing so at a time when market sentiment remains sensitive to global shocks.
Why the IPO timing could shift
Chief executive Sidhant Keshwani said the company is targeting an initial public offering by early next financial year.
Even so, he indicated that the listing could be delayed by a few months if market conditions do not improve or if tensions in the Middle East continue to unsettle investors.
That makes the IPO less a fixed deadline than a window.
For consumer companies such as Libas, public market timing matters because sentiment can directly influence valuation, institutional demand and overall listing quality.
If markets stabilise, the company could proceed as planned. If volatility persists, waiting may help it avoid a weaker debut.
How aggressive the expansion plan is
Libas is pursuing a rapid expansion strategy in India.
The retailer currently operates around 50 stores across more than 15 cities and plans to add at least 70 outlets a year over the next two years, taking its total store count to over 200.
That is a sharp increase and suggests management sees sufficient demand to support a much larger physical footprint, even as online channels continue to shape fashion retail.
The expansion is not limited to India.
Libas is also considering store openings in the UAE and the US over the next one to two years, while adopting a wait-and-watch approach to international expansion given the Middle East crisis.
What the numbers say about growth
The company says annual growth has been running at 30% to 35%, with revenue for the year ended March 31 expected to exceed Rs 7 billion, up roughly 30% from a year earlier.
Those figures help explain why Libas is considering both an IPO and a private equity round as it enters a more investment-heavy phase.
The business combines its own retail network with a broader distribution presence, extending its reach beyond physical stores.
That mix of direct retail and wider distribution could appeal to investors, particularly if store expansion strengthens brand visibility without significantly eroding margins.
Why funding options remain open
Alongside IPO preparations, Libas is exploring private equity funding.
The company raised about Rs 1.5 billion (roughly $16.1 million) in 2024, and additional capital could help fund store expansion, strengthen supply chains and support international plans ahead of a listing.
Keeping both routes open is a practical choice.
A private round would give the company flexibility if market conditions delay the IPO, while allowing it to continue investing in growth.
For investors, the key question will be whether that capital is used to improve profitability as well as scale.
What could shape the next phase
Costs are another area to watch.
Management has indicated that higher raw material and freight costs are already being absorbed, and that prices could be raised gradually if pressures persist.
That is significant because apparel retailers often face a delicate balance between protecting margins and maintaining demand in a competitive market.
The wider backdrop is supportive in one sense. India’s retail market is expanding rapidly, driven in part by a growing middle class.
But fast growth also raises expectations.
For Libas, the next phase will be judged on whether it can translate strong revenue momentum into a larger, more profitable and more resilient business before it reaches the public market.
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