Shares of Indian Energy Exchange (IEX) fell sharply on Monday, declining nearly 8 per cent after a regulatory development unsettled investor sentiment. The stock settled at ₹124.99 on the NSE, hitting an intraday low of ₹124.20 compared with the previous close of ₹135.81.
IEX shares
The decline followed the release of a draft proposal by the Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (CERC) on electricity price discovery, which introduces market coupling norms that could significantly alter the dynamics of power exchanges in India.
Balaji Rao Mudili, Research Analyst at Bonanza, said the stock reaction reflects concerns over the erosion of IEX’s competitive advantage.
“IEX is down following the draft notification released by CERC on market coupling norms. Under the draft, Grid India will act as the Market Coupling Operator, aggregating bids from all exchanges and determining a uniform market clearing price. The exchanges however will continue to collect bids but will no longer set prices,” he noted.
Mudili highlighted that IEX currently holds around 84 per cent market share in the power exchange segment, making its discovered price effectively the national benchmark—a key strength that is now under threat.
“In layman terms, IEX effectively becomes a bid collection front end rather than a price discovering exchange, thereby diluting its major moat,” he explained.
The new norms could also level the playing field for smaller exchanges such as Power Exchange India Limited and Hindustan Power Exchange, allowing them to attract volumes without needing to build their own liquidity pools. For IEX, this could translate into slower volume growth as it loses its role as the primary price setter.
IEX derives about 78 per cent of its revenue from per-unit transaction fees, making it highly sensitive to any loss in market share.
Mudili added that the transition will begin with the Day Ahead Market (DAM), IEX’s largest revenue segment, before extending to other trading formats such as the Real-Time Market (RTM).
“To sustain volume amid rising competition, IEX may slash trading margin, putting further pressure on earnings. FY26 electricity volume had increased 17 per cent YoY to 141BU on IEX,” said Elara Securities while recommending Accumulate with a TP of ₹145, assuming a trading margin of 3 paise/unit and a market share of 70 per cnet in FY28E.
“IEX trades at a P/E of around 24, a premium built on its dominance. If that dominance fades, multiples could compress,” add Mudili.
While India’s power market continues to expand, offering growth opportunities, the analyst cautioned that the narrative of IEX as a near-monopoly player is effectively over. “The market is still in the middle of repricing what IEX is worth without that moat,” he further said.
Published on April 20, 2026
