SoftBank fund in talks to invest $2bn in Flipkart

The logo of Flipkart Online Services Pvt is seen on the side of a package at the company's office in the Jayaprakash Narayan Nagar area of Bengaluru, India, on Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2016. Flipkart, India's largest and most valuable e-commerce company, is against domestic rival Snapdeal.com and U.S. leviathan Amazon.com Inc., all tussling for dominance in a market that Morgan Stanley expects to explode more than ten-fold to $137 billion by 2020 from $11 billion in 2013. Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg

Bloomberg

SoftBank Vision Fund, the technology investor founded by Masayoshi Son, is in talks to invest directly in India’s Flipkart Online Services Pvt, according to people familiar with the matter, after talks to fold SoftBank-backed Snapdeal into Flipkart fell apart.
The fund is looking at putting between $1.5 billion and $2 billion into the largest Indian e-commerce operator within the next two months, said one of the people, asking to not be identified as the discussions are private. About half the money would go to Tiger Global Management, which wants to sell part of its Flipkart stake, while the rest of the funds would go to Flipkart, the person said.
The Vision Fund was founded by Son, chairman of SoftBank Group Corp., but operates as a separate entity. The prospective Flipkart investment comes after Snapdeal, which was backed by SoftBank directly, on Monday spurned a merger proposal from Flipkart to pursue a future as a standalone company. The Japanese company has largely written off its investment in Snapdeal.
Flipkart was valued at $11.6 billion in April after EBay Inc., Tencent Holdings Ltd. and Microsoft Corp. together invested $1.4 billion. Adding investment from the deep-pocketed Vision Fund would help the Indian company compete with Amazon.com Inc., which has said it plans to invest at least $5 billion in its India operations.
SoftBank has been an enthusiastic supporter of e-commerce in developing markets. Its investment in Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. started with $20 million in 2000; its stake in the Chinese company is worth more than $100 billion. Flipkart did not respond to an email, while SoftBank declined to comment.

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