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Swiggy Share Price Today: Swiggy Stock in Focus After ₹10,000 Crore QIP Close; Analysts’ Targets Split From ₹290 to ₹740
13 December 2025
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Swiggy Share Price Today: Swiggy Stock in Focus After ₹10,000 Crore QIP Close; Analysts’ Targets Split From ₹290 to ₹740

Updated: Saturday, December 13, 2025 (India)

Swiggy Limited stock is back in the spotlight this weekend after the company completed a ₹10,000 crore Qualified Institutional Placement (QIP)—one of the biggest equity raises by an Indian internet-era company—at a time when the quick commerce arms race is still chewing through cash across the sector.

As markets are closed on Saturday, “Swiggy share price today” is effectively referencing the most recent traded levels/close. Multiple market trackers place Swiggy around ₹416.5 (last traded/close), with the stock up roughly ~17% over six months but down about ~20% over one year, and a 52-week range of ~₹297 to ~₹617. ICICI Direct+1

Below is what’s driving the Swiggy stock conversation as of 13.12.2025—the QIP details, where the money is expected to go, what brokerages are forecasting, and the key risks investors are debating.


Swiggy closes ₹10,000 crore QIP: price, discount, and dilution in plain English

Swiggy has allotted 26,66,66,663 equity shares to qualified institutional buyers at an issue price of ₹375 per share, raising ₹9,999.99 crore. The price represents a 3.97% discount to the SEBI-calculated floor price of ₹390.51. The QIP opened on December 9 and closed on December 12, 2025.

Economic Times’ reporting adds that the ₹375 allocation price also worked out to roughly a 10–11% discount versus the stock’s traded levels around ₹416–₹417 at the time, and that the placement was allocated across leading domestic mutual funds and global investors.

That discount is not automatically “bad.” In India, QIPs are often priced with a modest discount to secure rapid institutional participation. But for existing shareholders, the real trade-off is dilution: new shares mean the business must grow fast enough that future earnings (or future profitability) outpace the larger share count.

A Mint analysis flags exactly this concern: Swiggy is raising significant equity barely ~13 months after its November 2024 IPO, and with nearly ~270 million new shares being issued, shareholders face close to ~10% dilution in a year—a headwind for long-term compounding if growth doesn’t keep up.


Who showed up for the QIP and why it matters to Swiggy stock

One reason the QIP is moving Swiggy stock sentiment: it appears to have attracted heavyweight institutional demand.

Moneycontrol reported that the QIP drew over 4X demand and interest from major domestic mutual funds (including SBI MF, ICICI Prudential MF, HDFC MF, Kotak MF) as well as global names such as Temasek, GIC, and Nomura, citing people familiar with the process.

Separate coverage also noted bids clustering around ₹375/share, consistent with the final issue price.

For Swiggy investors, this matters less as a “pop” catalyst and more as a strategic signal: institutions are effectively underwriting the idea that Swiggy needs a larger war chest to compete—especially in quick commerce—without being forced into short-term decisions.


Where Swiggy says the QIP money goes: Instamart expansion first, tech and brand next

The most market-moving line item in Swiggy’s QIP narrative is not the headline ₹10,000 crore—it’s how the company intends to deploy it.

Moneycontrol, citing regulatory disclosures, reported that ₹4,475 crore (the largest portion) is earmarked for expanding and operating the quick-commerce fulfilment network—dark stores and warehouses that power Instamart—with another ₹3,300 crore-plus planned for cloud infrastructure and brand spends over the next three years.

Moneycontrol also reported Swiggy plans to expand its fulfilment footprint from ~5 million sq ft (as of Nov 30, 2025) to ~6.7 million sq ft by Dec 2028—a multi-year build-out plan that frames the QIP as fuel for capacity, not just “marketing.” Moneycontrol

Mint’s analysis similarly notes a large portion of QIP proceeds aimed at quick-commerce fulfilment expansion, while also pointing to heavy spending such as marketing/brand building as part of the broader cash need.

Translation: Swiggy is treating Instamart like a long campaign, not a seasonal promotion.


The bull case hitting headlines: BofA upgrades Swiggy to “Buy” after the fundraise

The most cited “new” brokerage development around this weekend is Bank of America Securities’ upgrade.

BofA upgraded Swiggy from Neutral to Buy and raised its target price to ₹490 (from ₹475), arguing that the enlarged war chest strengthens Swiggy’s ability to defend (and potentially expand) its position in quick commerce while food delivery becomes a more consistent cash generator.

Notably, BofA’s thesis leans on sector dynamics: it suggests both Swiggy and competitor Eternal now have war chests of roughly ~US$2 billion, which could discourage smaller rivals from escalating funding-fueled aggression.

BofA also flagged management focus around getting quick commerce economics to improve—specifically highlighting a stated focus to turn contribution metrics positive over time (BofA references a June 2026 timeline in its note).


The bear case getting airtime: Macquarie stays “Underperform” with ₹290 target

Not all research is cheering the QIP.

NDTV Profit reported Macquarie maintains an Underperform rating on Swiggy with a ₹290 target price, explicitly warning that rising competitive intensity and frequent fundraising across the sector can become “problematic.” The note argues that 30%–50% of newly raised capital in the category may end up spent on discounts and incentives to defend customer engagement—an expensive loop if it persists. NDTV Profit

This is the core bearish framework: quick commerce is growing fast, but if everyone keeps paying customers to show up, shareholders fund the party.


So what do “consensus forecasts” actually say for Swiggy share price?

If you’re trying to reconcile the bullish and bearish headlines, the easiest way is to look at how wide the target range still is.

  • Investing.com’s analyst snapshot shows an average 12‑month price target of ~₹491.48, with a high estimate of ₹740 and a low estimate of ₹290, and an overall “Buy” skew in ratings. Investing.com
  • Trendlyne’s aggregation (based on the reports it tracks) shows a higher average target of ~₹563.33, implying a larger upside from ~₹416 levels—another reminder that “consensus” depends on which database you’re reading and which reports are included. Trendlyne.com

The practical takeaway for readers of Swiggy stock news: the market is still trying to price a company that has (1) a maturing, more profitable-ish core (food delivery) and (2) a still-investment-heavy growth engine (Instamart).


Swiggy fundamentals check: food delivery is improving, Instamart is scaling, losses persist

The QIP story lands on top of a mixed earnings picture.

For the quarter ended September 2025 (Q2 FY26), Reuters reported Swiggy posted a consolidated loss of ₹10.92 billion (about ₹1,092 crore) with revenue rising strongly and margins improving sequentially, helped by quick commerce growth even as investments remained high.

Business Standard’s Q2 coverage highlights how Swiggy is describing the internal split:

  • Instamart GOV grew 108% YoY to ₹7,022 crore, with Swiggy adding dark stores and expanding footprint (reported network: 1,102 dark stores across 128 cities, covering 4.6 million sq ft) and improving contribution margin sequentially.
  • The quick commerce segment still posted a significant loss in the quarter (Business Standard cites ₹849 crore segment loss), even as metrics improved.

Meanwhile, Mint’s longer lens notes that for the half-year ending September (H1 FY26), Swiggy’s revenue grew to ₹10,522 crore, while net loss was still ₹2,289 crore—a reminder that the profitability finish line is not yet crossed.

This is why the QIP is such a big deal: Swiggy is essentially buying time and optionality to keep building Instamart without being forced to slam the brakes at the worst possible moment.


Competitive landscape: Swiggy vs Eternal (Zomato/Blinkit) vs Zepto, and why “war chests” matter

Quick commerce is where most of the market’s adrenaline lives. Reuters has described the category as an investment frenzy driven by rapid growth, with major players subsidising deliveries, offering discounts, and expanding warehouse networks—dynamics that can pressure profitability even when demand is surging.

Swiggy’s primary listed peer comparison is often framed against Eternal (the company formerly known as Zomato). Reuters reported Zomato’s corporate rebrand to Eternal, with the group structure including Zomato (food delivery) and Blinkit (quick commerce) among its major businesses.

The strategic implication for Swiggy stock is straightforward: in a two-front war (food + quick commerce), scale and balance sheet endurance can matter as much as product.

And outside the platform players, demand signals are also strengthening. For example, Reuters reported packaged-food maker Orkla India is leaning into quick delivery platforms (including Instamart) as part of its growth and e-commerce strategy—evidence that brands increasingly treat quick commerce as a mainstream channel.


Swiggy share price levels to know on Dec 13, 2025

With Saturday trading closed, the latest widely quoted reference remains Friday’s levels:

  • Swiggy around ₹416.5 (last close/traded reference for Dec 13 displays).
  • 52‑week range: roughly ₹297 to ₹617.3.
  • Market cap around ~₹1.03 lakh crore (varies slightly by tracker/time).

This context matters because the QIP issue price (₹375) sits meaningfully below the traded price (~₹416), but also not dramatically above/below the IPO price levels that investors still remember.


What to watch next in Swiggy stock: catalysts and risks

The next phase for Swiggy Limited stock will likely hinge on whether the QIP becomes a profitability accelerator or simply a longer extension cord for cash burn.

Potential catalysts

BofA’s framework points to upside if sector consolidation reduces irrational competition and if Swiggy’s quick commerce losses genuinely peak and start shrinking with scale.

Key risks

The bear argument (as echoed by Macquarie via NDTV Profit) is that capital raises across the sector could translate into more spending on incentives and discounts to defend engagement—delaying sustainable economics.

Separately, Mint’s dilution-focused critique is a structural reminder: even if Swiggy grows fast, frequent equity issuance can blunt per-share wealth creation unless profitability scales faster than the share count.


Bottom line

As of 13 December 2025, the Swiggy stock story is dominated by one headline with two interpretations:

  • Optimistic read: a ₹10,000 crore QIP at strong institutional demand strengthens the balance sheet, lets Swiggy compete longer and smarter, and increases the odds that Instamart’s scale eventually translates into improved margins.
  • Skeptical read: a massive equity raise so soon after the IPO highlights how expensive the quick-commerce land grab remains, increases dilution, and risks turning into a prolonged incentive war that postpones durable profitability.

Either way, the market is telling you something deliciously modern: Swiggy is no longer just a food delivery brand—it’s a balance-sheet and execution story in one of India’s most competitive consumer tech arenas.

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