Fiscal Nepal
First Business News Portal in English from Nepal
KATHMANDU: Securities Board of Nepal has introduced a stringent new framework to review financial statements of companies planning to launch Initial Public Offerings (IPOs), aiming to strengthen transparency, investor protection, and regulatory oversight in Nepal’s rapidly evolving capital market.
The capital market regulator has approved the “Financial Statement Review Guidelines 2082” (2025/26), which will come into effect from Baisakh 1, 2083 (mid-April 2026). The decision was taken during the SEBON board meeting held on Chaitra 23, 2082 (April 5, 2026), marking a significant policy shift in how IPO-bound companies are evaluated before public issuance.
The new standards are grounded in provisions of the Securities Act 2007, particularly Section 90, which grants SEBON the authority to review or audit financial statements submitted by issuers and securities intermediaries through independent accounting experts when necessary.
SEBON stated that the new framework is designed to eliminate financial manipulation, enhance disclosure quality, and ensure that only fundamentally sound companies are allowed to raise capital from the public.
Under the updated guidelines, SEBON will mandatorily scrutinize financial statements of IPO applicants if certain risk indicators are detected:
These provisions aim to curb aggressive accounting practices and ensure that reported earnings reflect genuine operational performance rather than accounting adjustments.
For companies with three years of audited financials, SEBON will conduct deeper analysis in cases where:
Additionally, if auditors’ qualifications or remarks—once adjusted—render the company unfit for IPO issuance, the regulator will intervene.
Recognizing sectoral differences, SEBON has introduced tailored benchmarks:
These differentiated thresholds reflect Nepal’s diverse industrial structure and the regulator’s attempt to apply context-sensitive oversight.
Beyond predefined criteria, SEBON has retained discretionary authority to initiate financial reviews under several circumstances:
This ensures that regulatory intervention is not limited to mechanical thresholds but also responsive to market intelligence and governance signals.
This move is expected to have wide-ranging implications for Nepal’s IPO pipeline, particularly as investor participation in the secondary market continues to expand.
Market analysts suggest that while the stricter framework may initially slow down IPO approvals, it will significantly improve investor confidence, reduce speculative listings, and align Nepal’s regulatory practices closer to international standards.
The tightening comes at a time when Nepal’s capital market is witnessing increasing retail participation, rising demand for IPOs, and growing concerns over financial transparency of issuing companies.
By enforcing deeper forensic-level scrutiny, SEBON aims to ensure that IPO-bound firms present accurate, reliable, and decision-useful financial information, thereby safeguarding public investment and promoting sustainable capital formation.
With the implementation of these guidelines, SEBON is positioning itself as a more proactive and interventionist regulator. The emphasis is clearly shifting from procedural approval to substantive financial validation, which could redefine IPO readiness benchmarks in Nepal.
As Nepal moves toward strengthening its financial ecosystem, the new standards are likely to set a precedent for improved corporate governance, stricter compliance culture, and higher-quality public offerings in the years ahead.
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