Home/ Markets / Ipo/  Delhivery eyes Q4 IPO at $4 bn value
Back

MUMBAI : Delhivery is weighing a valuation of $4 billion for its proposed public listing in the March quarter, said two people with direct knowledge of the matter.

This would mark an increase of about a third from the $3 billion at which the company was valued last week in its latest fundraising round, underscoring the strong fillip to the logistics tech startup’s business during the pandemic.

Delhivery is likely to sell a 10-15% stake for $500-600 million through the planned initial public offering (IPO), the people cited above said, requesting anonymity. They said the company could file its draft prospectus with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) either in July or August for the share sale.

Booming market
View Full Image
Booming market

Delhivery, which is heavily reliant on technology, unlike traditional shippers, is gaining from a surge in demand during the pandemic that has restricted human movement and involvement of middlemen in the logistics business.

The company earns as much as 65-70% of its revenue from e-commerce firms. “Delhivery’s valuation could go up by at least 25-30% till the time of the IPO launch since the company’s revenue is steadily rising and the books are flush with cash," one of the two people cited above said.

A spokesperson for Delhivery declined to comment. A spokesperson for Multiples, which has a small stake in Delhivery, declined to comment.

Delhivery’s rivals include FedEx, Blue Dart, Ecom Express, Gati and XpressBees.

The second person said the IPO could also see an offer for sale (OFS) by existing investors of Delhivery to provide an exit opportunity to some of its early investors.

“Some of the early-stage investors, including Carlyle Group, Tiger Global, Multiples and Fosun, could consider a part-exit of holdings in Delhivery through the OFS (offer for sale) window during the IPO," the second person said, adding the issue would be separate from the public issue.

On Monday, The Economic Times reported that Delhivery set up a board sub-committee for its IPO and mergers and acquisitions in January. The company has $550 million in cash, the report said, citing co-founder and chief executive Sahil Barua.

Last week, the Gurgaon-based startup said in a regulatory filing that it raised $277 million in a round led by Boston-based investment firm Fidelity and joined by Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC, Abu Dhabi’s Chimera, and UK’s Baillie Gifford. The fundraising round valued Delhivery at $3 billion.

Masayoshi Son-led SoftBank Vision Fund, Tiger Global Management, Times Internet, Carlyle Group and Steadview Capital have so far invested a total of about $1.23 billion in Delhivery.

Delhivery began operations in 2011 as a food delivery firm, but, over time, it grew to become a full-fledged technology-driven logistics firm operating in at least 2,200 Indian cities spanning 17,500 pin codes.

The firm operates in the logistics space for sectors such as mobile phones, laptops, consumer electronics, fashion, pharma, healthcare and hygiene, lifestyle and personal care.

In March 2019, Delhivery became a so-called unicorn—a startup with more than $1 billion valuation—after raising $395 million in a Series F funding round from SoftBank. Carlyle Group and Chinese conglomerate Fosun International, both existing investors at the time, also took part in that round by investing a combined $45 million.

SoftBank owns 23.41% of Delhivery, while Carlyle has a 12.39% stake. Carlyle, along with existing investor Tiger Global, had invested $100 million in Delhivery in March 2017.

Private equity firm Multiples Alternate Asset Management, venture capital firm Nexus Venture Partners, and digital business company Times Internet Ltd had invested in Delhivery at the stage of the startup’s inception.

Delhivery’s business is different from other conventional logistics firms since the company’s platform considerably decreases the involvement of brokers and uses its own assets such as trucks for transportation. This reduces the overall carrying cost, chances of theft, damages and delays.

Delhivery’s company website claims to have delivered more than 1 billion orders, and it works with more than 10,000 customers, including all of India’s largest e-commerce companies and leading enterprises.

The startup narrowed its net loss by 85% in fiscal 2020 to 269 crore from 1,772.70 crore in FY19.

Revenue jumped 76% to 2,988.6 crore in FY20 while it cut expenses by 6% to 3,250.4 crore.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Anirudh Laskar
Anirudh Laskar is a senior editor at Mint, with 17 years of experience. He has reported on significant corporate matters including large mergers and acquisitions, India's emerging e-commerce sector and regulatory issues in the financial services industry. Based out of Mint’s Mumbai bureau, Anirudh has worked with Business Standard and The Telegraph before joining Mint in 2009.
Know your inner investor Do you have the nerves of steel or do you get insomniac over your investments? Let’s define your investment approach.
Take the test
Catch all the Business News, Market News, Breaking News Events and Latest News Updates on Live Mint. Download The Mint News App to get Daily Market Updates.
More Less
Updated: 09 Jun 2021, 07:21 AM IST
Recommended For You
GENIE RECOMMENDS

Get the best recommendations on Stocks, Mutual Funds and more based on your Risk profile!

Let’s get started
×
Get alerts on WhatsApp
Set Preferences My Reads Watchlist Feedback Redeem a Gift Card Logout