The Bombay Stock Exchange, meanwhile, has consolidated its position as home to the maximum number of listed companies in the world.
NSE's 15 per cent growth is next only to 23.3 per cent growth at Poland's Warsaw Stock Exchange and 15.4 per cent for Malta Stock Exchange, data compiled by the World Federation of Exchanges show.
The Mumbai-based bourse has added 160 companies to its listed universe from a total of 1,082 at the end of April 2006. Out of these, more than 60 companies have joined the bourse this year itself.
The bourse has seen a whopping ten-fold surge in number of listed companies in nearly 13 years from about 100 firms in 1994-95, after it was recognized as a stock exchange under the Securities Contracts (Regulation) Act in April 1993.
While Warsaw and Malta Stock Exchanges have clocked higher gains than India's NSE, their 23.3 and 15.4 per cent growth rates were primarily due to a lower base. In terms of number of companies, Warsaw and Malta bourses added just 56 and two firms respectively, the WFE data show.
Leading global bourses like New York Stock Exchange in the US, UK-based London Stock Exchange and Deutsche Boerse in Europe all recorded lower growth rates.