
PNB Finance and Industries Ltd. Unlisted Share Price
As of , the indicative unlisted share price of PNB Finance and Industries Ltd. is ₹8,800 per share. This is an over-the-counter reference price, not a stock-exchange quote.
As of , PNB Finance and Industries Ltd. is not listed on any Indian stock exchange (NSE or BSE) — its shares trade in the unlisted, over-the-counter (pre-IPO) market.
| Price / unit | ₹8,800 |
|---|---|
| Market cap | ₹2,432 Cr |
| Min. investment | ₹44,000 |
| Lot size | 5 |
| P/E ratio | 339.74 |
| P/B ratio | 0.74 |
What is PNB Finance and Industries Ltd.?
PNB Finance and Industries Ltd. is an unlisted Financials company whose shares trade in India's over-the-counter (pre-IPO) market and settle in demat form (NSDL/CDSL).
PNB Finance and Industries Limited is an investment holding company that traces its lineage to The Punjab National Bank Limited, one of India's oldest banking institutions. When the banking business was nationalised in 1970 and absorbed into the present-day public sector Punjab National Bank, the original corporate entity continued as a separate company. It was renamed PNB Finance Limited in the mid-1970s and adopted its current name a few years later, before registering with the Reserve Bank of India as a Non-Banking Financial Company. Today the company functions primarily as an investment vehicle rather than an operating business. Its activities centre on deploying surplus funds into shares, debentures, bonds, units and other securities, with an emphasis on capital preservation and earning income from this portfolio. The company does not accept public deposits and does not run a lending or consumer-facing financial services operation, which positions it as a low-activity, asset-holding entity. Its paid-up equity capital is modest at around ₹3.2 crore, spread across roughly 32 lakh shares of ₹10 face value, while its market capitalisation in the unlisted market is estimated in the region of several hundred crore to a few thousand crore depending on the indicative price. It is important to distinguish this company from Punjab National Bank, the large nationalised lender listed on the main stock exchanges; PNB Finance and Industries is a distinct, separate corporate entity. Its equity shares historically carried listings on the now-defunct regional Delhi and Calcutta stock exchanges, and the shares are not actively traded on the NSE or BSE main boards. Interest in the unlisted market stems from the company's heritage name, its concentrated investment portfolio, its compact and tightly held share structure, and the scarcity value that comes with limited float. Investors and observers tracking legacy holding companies and asset-rich balance sheets often follow it for its underlying securities portfolio, which gives the stock the character of a closely held investment holding entity.
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Frequently asked questions
No. As of 16 July 2026, PNB Finance and Industries Ltd. is an unlisted company whose shares trade over-the-counter; it would list only if and when it completes an IPO.
The minimum lot is 5 share(s); at the indicative price of about ₹8,800, that is approximately ₹44,000. Indicative reference, not a quote.
As of 16 July 2026, the indicative unlisted share price of PNB Finance and Industries Ltd. is ₹8,800 per share. This is an over-the-counter reference price, not a stock-exchange quote.
PNB Finance and Industries Ltd is an investment holding company registered as a Non-Banking Financial Company with the RBI. It traces its origin to The Punjab National Bank Limited, whose banking business was nationalised in 1970. The company today mainly invests its surplus funds in shares, debentures, bonds, units and other securities, focusing on capital preservation and income from its portfolio rather than running a lending or consumer-facing business. It does not accept public deposits.
No. PNB Finance and Industries Ltd is not listed or actively traded on the NSE or BSE main boards; it is a separate entity from the listed Punjab National Bank. Its shares historically carried listings only on the now-defunct regional Delhi and Calcutta stock exchanges. Unlisted shares of such companies are typically transferred off-market in demat form between buyers and sellers through intermediaries facilitating unlisted-share transactions, subject to applicable documentation and settlement processes.
The indicative price reflects market data from off-market transactions and quotes, and can vary between platforms and over time. It is influenced by factors such as the value of the company's underlying investment portfolio, its book value and net asset position, the limited and tightly held share float, buyer and seller demand, and overall sentiment toward legacy investment holding companies. As an indicative figure, it is not an official exchange-traded price.
The company carries CIN L65929DL1947PLC001240 and ISIN INE057F01011, with shares of ₹10 face value. Its paid-up equity capital is around ₹3.2 crore, spread across roughly 32 lakh shares, and its registered office is in Delhi. It operates as an asset-holding NBFC with a concentrated securities portfolio and limited operating activity, reporting modest revenue derived largely from investment income.
They can. If the company declares a dividend, unlisted shareholders are eligible like any other shareholder. Many unlisted firms reinvest profits, so dividends are not guaranteed.
After listing, unlisted shares convert into regular listed shares in your demat account and can be traded on the exchange, usually once any applicable SEBI lock-in period ends.
Unlisted shares are less liquid than listed shares. You can sell when a buyer is available through an off-market transfer; there is no continuous exchange market, so exits can take longer.
Unlisted shares carry higher risk and lower liquidity than listed shares, with fewer disclosures and no live market price. This is general information, not investment advice — assess suitability before investing.
An unlisted share price is an indicative, over-the-counter reference set by demand and supply in private deals between buyers and sellers. There is no live exchange quote, so prices can vary across dealers and over time.
Yes. Unlisted shares are delivered in dematerialised form, so you need an active demat account (NSDL or CDSL). No special account type is required — a regular demat account works.
Unlisted shares are sold through an off-market transfer to a buyer via a registered intermediary, settling from your demat account with a contract note. Liquidity depends on buyer availability, so exits can take longer than listed shares.
PNB Finance and Industries Ltd. vs similar unlisted Financials shares
Indicative over-the-counter prices, as of 16 July 2026. Information only — not a recommendation or ranking.