<p><em><strong>By Alex Gabriel Simon Thattil and Saritha Rai</strong></em></p>.<p>While recession fears have seen new listings grind to a halt this year, one of the few companies currently seeking to go public in Mumbai is testing investor appetite for India’s growing wine market.</p>.<p>Sula Vineyards Ltd., which last month filed for an initial public offering, says it has over a 50% share of India’s small but rapidly growing wine market. The 26-year-old company has opened tasting rooms and hosted an annual music festival as part of its effort to make the drink fashionable in a young country with an expanding middle class.</p>.<p>“When Sula entered the market, wine was seen as something aspirational -- for people above 45 years of age,” said Abhay Kewadkar, an independent alcoholic beverage consultant. “They cleverly changed that perspective by targeting younger consumers.”</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/wine-producer-sula-vineyards-files-ipo-papers-with-sebi-1127199.html">Wine producer Sula Vineyards files IPO papers with Sebi</a></strong></p>.<p>The winemaker is looking to go public at a time when IPOs have dried up in India, as in much of the world, amid concerns of a recession. Young retail traders who <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-12-19/risks-pile-up-for-millions-of-day-traders-buying-india-stocks" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">helped drive</a> the local stock market over the past couple of years have been burned in recent months by plunges in high-flying tech unicorns such as Zomato Ltd. and Paytm parent One 97 Communications Ltd.</p>.<p>The S&P BSE IPO Index, a gauge tracking the performance of Indian shares for the first two years after listing, has fallen 24% so far in 2022 after nearly tripling in the previous three years.</p>.<p>Sula hasn’t yet disclosed a value for the planned of sale of about a third of its existing equity, including shares held by founder and Managing Director Rajeev Samant. The company posted sales of $57 million for the year ended March 31, around a tenth of the revenue at Zomato and Paytm, though unlike the two tech firms Sula is profitable.</p>.<p>In its draft prospectus, Sula claims that India is the world’s third-largest market for alcoholic beverages, at $33 billion in 2020, but wine only accounts for 1%. The company believes this allows much room for growth, projecting total Indian sales of 3.4 million cases of wine in 2025, up 70% from the level in 2021.</p>.<p>Samant, a 55-year-old Stanford graduate, has worked to boost demand by promoting wine tourism in Sula’s production base of Nashik, which is seen as <a href="https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/neo-markets/nashik-indias-napa-valley/articleshow/1405169.cms" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">India’s version</a> of Napa Valley. The company says social media has also helped lift the beverage’s profile and claims Sula is among the top 10 most-followed vineyards on Instagram globally.</p>.<p>Sula will raise no money from the IPO itself but hopes the listing will boost its visibility and brand image. It could also have a halo effect for the whole industry, with the company’s local competitors including unlisted Fratelli Wines and Grover Zampa Vineyards.</p>.<p>“This IPO will bring the wine segment into the limelight,” said Ronak Soni, an analyst at Equirus Securities Pvt. “It’s a fast-growing segment.”</p>
<p><em><strong>By Alex Gabriel Simon Thattil and Saritha Rai</strong></em></p>.<p>While recession fears have seen new listings grind to a halt this year, one of the few companies currently seeking to go public in Mumbai is testing investor appetite for India’s growing wine market.</p>.<p>Sula Vineyards Ltd., which last month filed for an initial public offering, says it has over a 50% share of India’s small but rapidly growing wine market. The 26-year-old company has opened tasting rooms and hosted an annual music festival as part of its effort to make the drink fashionable in a young country with an expanding middle class.</p>.<p>“When Sula entered the market, wine was seen as something aspirational -- for people above 45 years of age,” said Abhay Kewadkar, an independent alcoholic beverage consultant. “They cleverly changed that perspective by targeting younger consumers.”</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/wine-producer-sula-vineyards-files-ipo-papers-with-sebi-1127199.html">Wine producer Sula Vineyards files IPO papers with Sebi</a></strong></p>.<p>The winemaker is looking to go public at a time when IPOs have dried up in India, as in much of the world, amid concerns of a recession. Young retail traders who <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-12-19/risks-pile-up-for-millions-of-day-traders-buying-india-stocks" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">helped drive</a> the local stock market over the past couple of years have been burned in recent months by plunges in high-flying tech unicorns such as Zomato Ltd. and Paytm parent One 97 Communications Ltd.</p>.<p>The S&P BSE IPO Index, a gauge tracking the performance of Indian shares for the first two years after listing, has fallen 24% so far in 2022 after nearly tripling in the previous three years.</p>.<p>Sula hasn’t yet disclosed a value for the planned of sale of about a third of its existing equity, including shares held by founder and Managing Director Rajeev Samant. The company posted sales of $57 million for the year ended March 31, around a tenth of the revenue at Zomato and Paytm, though unlike the two tech firms Sula is profitable.</p>.<p>In its draft prospectus, Sula claims that India is the world’s third-largest market for alcoholic beverages, at $33 billion in 2020, but wine only accounts for 1%. The company believes this allows much room for growth, projecting total Indian sales of 3.4 million cases of wine in 2025, up 70% from the level in 2021.</p>.<p>Samant, a 55-year-old Stanford graduate, has worked to boost demand by promoting wine tourism in Sula’s production base of Nashik, which is seen as <a href="https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/neo-markets/nashik-indias-napa-valley/articleshow/1405169.cms" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">India’s version</a> of Napa Valley. The company says social media has also helped lift the beverage’s profile and claims Sula is among the top 10 most-followed vineyards on Instagram globally.</p>.<p>Sula will raise no money from the IPO itself but hopes the listing will boost its visibility and brand image. It could also have a halo effect for the whole industry, with the company’s local competitors including unlisted Fratelli Wines and Grover Zampa Vineyards.</p>.<p>“This IPO will bring the wine segment into the limelight,” said Ronak Soni, an analyst at Equirus Securities Pvt. “It’s a fast-growing segment.”</p>