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§01 · EDITORIAL · GLOSSARY · FREE-FLOAT

Free Float

Free float is the portion of a company’s shares that are freely available for trading in the open market — excluding promoter holdings, government stakes, strategic investors, ESOP trusts, and locked-in shares. Formula: Free-float % = (Sh

Glossary

Free float is the portion of a company’s shares that are freely available for trading in the open market — excluding promoter holdings, government stakes, strategic investors, ESOP trusts, and locked-in shares.

Formula: Free-float % = (Shares outstanding − Locked/Promoter/Strategic) ÷ Shares outstanding × 100

INR example: Reliance Industries has ~50.3% promoter holding, so its free float is ~49.7%. Free-float market cap = Total market cap × free-float factor. Nifty 50 and Sensex are free-float weighted indices — only the tradable portion counts toward index weight.

When to use: When comparing index weights, liquidity, or eligibility for benchmark inclusion. Higher free float = better liquidity, lower impact cost. Stocks with very low free float (< 10%) face liquidity constraints and higher price volatility.

SEBI note: SEBI requires minimum 25% public shareholding for continued listing (Rule 19A of SCRR). Government-owned companies have a 25% MPS target.

Related terms: FPI (Foreign Portfolio Investor), P/E Ratio, Index Fund.

Reviewed · January 2026

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Glossary definitions are written for Indian capital allocators first; where US convention differs, the entry calls that out explicitly. MintByte is an AMFI-registered mutual fund distributor (ARN-314872); SEBI Registered Investment Adviser and Research Analyst registrations are in process. Not investment advice.