Billionaire Status Beckons: Lenskart IPO Poised to Elevate Founder Peyush Bansal

Peyush Bansal, the visionary entrepreneur who co-founded Lenskart 15 years ago with partners he met on LinkedIn, is now on the brink of entering the billionaire club. His eyewear business, which began as a market disruption, has grown into a multi-billion dollar startup and is preparing for an initial public offering (IPO).
Lenskart is reportedly planning its stock market debut as early as November, targeting a substantial $9 billion valuation during its listing on Dalal Street. This valuation could see Peyush Bansal's stake approach $800 million, even after selling a portion of his shares in the IPO. Should Lenskart shares rise by approximately 25% on debut, his stock value is projected to exceed $1 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.
Bansal's journey to the Lenskart IPO signals a renewed confidence among investors in founder-led ventures, especially following a period where many leading Indian startups faced significant survival challenges and a notable drying up of funding. Lenskart has successfully carved out a unique niche through its advanced robotic production in India, utilizing machinery imported from Germany to manufacture its glasses. Complementing this is a robust online platform that streamlines customer ordering and remote testing of purchases.
The company, which began by addressing a huge domestic market, is now actively expanding across Southeast Asia. Bansal observes that demand patterns in countries like Indonesia and Vietnam strikingly mirror India's trajectory from a decade ago. He emphasized, "India is the myopia capital of the world, and a lot of our people need glasses. If we can solve that, everything else, including scale, profit and rising market capitalisation, will follow."
A key differentiator for Bansal is Lenskart's proven profitability, setting it apart from earlier Indian consumer-tech listings. The Gurugram-based company, which manages the entire value chain from design and manufacturing to online and retail sales, reported its first-ever full-year profit for the fiscal year ending March 31.
Beyond Lenskart, Bansal enjoys a considerable public profile as a judge on the Indian franchise of the popular American show Shark Tank, where he has amassed over 900,000 Instagram followers. He attributes his business success to a combination of timing and persistence, humorously noting his 50% hit rate with new ideas brainstormed weekly with co-founder Amit Chaudhary.
Despite the current climate of trade wars, geopolitical headwinds, and more cautious investors, Lenskart is forging ahead. While India's startup ecosystem is one of the world's largest, it has recently seen nosediving valuations for several companies as investors demand tougher questions and accountability. The family office of tech billionaire Narayana Murthy highlighted steep discounts driven by funds needing to exit investments. Oyo Hotels, another SoftBank-backed entity, famously saw its $10 billion valuation in 2019 plummet before a subsequent recovery.
Peyush Bansal's strategic approach has attracted patient investors, including SoftBank Group Corp., which holds approximately 15% of Lenskart. SoftBank views its stake as an example of patient capital, willing to wait decades for compounding growth. Earlier this year, Fidelity Management & Research valued Lenskart at $6.1 billion. The upcoming IPO will serve as a crucial test for the sustained rebound in investor appetite for Indian consumer-technology stocks, an optimism rekindled by Urban Co.’s recent blockbuster debut, which saw its shares surge 62% on opening day.
However, Lenskart faces a notable challenge: its reliance on China for over one-third of its purchases, including frames, molds, and raw materials. Bansal acknowledges this dependence but considers it manageable, though it exposes the firm to potential supply-chain disruptions, tariffs, or export curbs that could impact deliveries and erode margins. To mitigate such risks and bolster production capacity, Bansal is overseeing the development of a new manufacturing facility in Hyderabad. This facility is projected to be the world's largest, spanning 50 acres with a daily production capacity of hundreds of thousands of glasses.
Before Lenskart, Bansal, an engineering graduate from McGill University, began his career at Microsoft Corp. in Redmond, Washington. He later returned to India to pursue entrepreneurship. His initial venture, a student-housing platform, evolved into a broader mission after he identified a significant unmet need in vision care. From a modest office in Faridabad, on the outskirts of Delhi, he and his three LinkedIn-met partners began building Lenskart. Today, the company controls nearly every aspect of its value chain, from lens design and manufacturing to last-mile delivery. It employs hundreds of ophthalmologists in Kolkata for remote eye consultations and is developing AI-based testing tools to extend eye care access to smaller cities.
Lenskart intends to utilize the proceeds from its share sale to fund various initiatives, including opening new stores across India, investing in technology and artificial intelligence capabilities, making strategic acquisitions, and for general corporate purposes. As of March, the company operated 2,723 stores across India, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia, with nearly 40% of its revenue now generated from outside India, highlighting its expanding international presence.
Looking to the future, Lenskart's next significant endeavor is smart eyewear. A dedicated 70-member team is currently working on integrating advanced features such as UPI, AI tools, cameras, and headphones into eyewear. Bansal, ever pragmatic, noted, "It’s tempting to go all in. But timing matters."
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