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Carlsberg Is Lining Up A $700 Million IPO For Its India Business

Published Jun 9, 2026
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Rows of brown glass beer bottles on a conveyor belt in a brewery, surrounded by industrial stainless steel equipment and tanks, with condensation visible on the bottles.
Summary:
  • Carlsberg is preparing to file draft papers to list its India unit, possibly this month.
  • The IPO could raise as much as $700 million and may happen later this year.
  • Carlsberg India is the country's second-largest brewer with about 22% of the market.

Global beer giants keep finding the same pot of gold. It is in India.

The latest to reach for it is Carlsberg. The Danish brewer wants to take its India arm public.

It could turn into one of the bigger listings in India this year.

A Sale Of Old Shares, Not New Money

Carlsberg is set to file draft papers soon, maybe this month. An IPO, or initial public offering, is when a company first sells shares to the public.

This one could raise up to $700 million. It may land later this year.

It is set to be a secondary sale. That means Carlsberg would sell shares it already owns.

So the brewer would not raise new cash for the business. It would cash out part of its stake instead.

India is in the middle of an IPO boom right now. Many global firms are using it to take profits home.

The brewer is working with Kotak Mahindra Capital. The India arms of JPMorgan and Citigroup are helping too.

Carlsberg would only say it is weighing ways to lift value. It has made no final call.

We track the IPOs worth knowing about in Market Briefs, in plain English in five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you join.

Why India, Why Now

Carlsberg India is the country's second-largest brewer. It holds about 22% of the market.

It started there in 2007 and now runs 14 breweries. Eight of those are its own, and six are run by partners.

The bet behind the listing is simple. People in India are drinking more.

And India is one of the world's fastest-growing big economies. That mix is hard for a brewer to ignore.

Carlsberg is not alone here. Pernod Ricard, which makes Absolut vodka, has also looked at an India listing.

Pernod has even hired advisers for its own India plan. More global drinks makers are doing the same.

They all want to unlock the value of their India arms. A public listing is the cleanest way to do it.

One Caution Flag

The timing has a catch. Carlsberg's closest listed rival is United Breweries.

That company is worth about $3.6 billion. Its stock has fallen about 36% over the past year.

The wider market has held up better. India's Nifty 50 index is down about 8% in the same span.

United Breweries is the name investors will compare it to. A soft peer can weigh on how a new listing gets priced.

So beer stocks in India are not red hot right now.

What To Watch

The draft filing is just the first step. The price and timing can still change.

Watch for the papers to reach India's market regulator. That filing will show the real size and the real date.

Until then, the $700 million figure is a target, not a promise.

For now, the world's brewers have made their pick. And it pours pints in India.

If you want IPOs and market moves like this every weekday, join the investors reading Market Briefs - it comes with a 45-minute course on finding investments as a bonus.

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