The listing saw Asia's oldest stock exchange attain an individual market valuation of nearly Rs 5,750 crore, while the combined market capitalisation of all listed companies on its platform incidentally scaled a new record of Rs 115 lakh crore today.
After listing at Rs 1,085, up 34.61 per cent from the issue price of Rs 806 a piece, the BSE shares ended the first day of trading at Rs 1,069.20, a sharp gain of 32.65 per cent.
On the volume front, over 1.5 crore shares of the exchange were traded on NSE during the day.
Speaking at the listing ceremony at National Stock Exchange (NSE) here, BSE CEO Ashishkumar Chauhan promised that the exchange would stay focussed on a high level of compliance even after listing.
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BSE Chairman Sudhakar Rao said he was now looking forward to NSE getting listed on the BSE's platform. NSE too has filed draft papers with the Sebi in December for an estimated Rs 10,000 crore IPO.
"This is a culmination of 10 year long process of getting BSE listed. BSE was largely owned by brokers (for most of its life). Now (post-IPO) the traditional brokers own less than 30 per cent of the exchange and 70 per cent is public holding," Chauhan told reporters.
"Those who want to invest in BSE should only do so if they are confident about our business model. We are basically in the business of compliance and that will remain our mainstay going forward," he added.
NSE chairman Ashok Chawala addressing the listing ceremony said: "Governance, credibility, trust are very crucial aspect in the management of money and finance. Stock exchanges needless to say play a vital role in this respect."
He also noted that an organisation which provide such services are more open to questions and public scrutiny. Therefore, the listing of stock exchanges is a important step forward as public will have a role to play.
Investment, Caldwell India Holdings, Acacia Banyan Partners, Singapore Exchange, Mauritius-based arm of American investor George Soros' Quantum Fund and foreign fund Atticus.
Investor demand for the IPO was strong, with qualified institutional buyers (QIBs) portion getting oversubscribed 48.64 times, non institutional investors 159 times. Retail investors category was also oversubscribed 6.48 times.
"The IPO of BSE, Asia's oldest exchange listed at whopping 40 per cent premium over its issue price, all together singularly point out that the sentiments have turned very bullish," said Jimeet Modi, CEO, SAMCO Securities.
BSE's initial share sale is also the first this year after 26 companies together garnered Rs 26,000 crore through IPOs in 2016, making it the best year for public offers since 2010.
It is the world's 10th largest exchange by market capitalisation.
BSE had reported a 40 per cent increase in consolidated net profit at Rs 52.72 crore for the first quarter to June 2016.