Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Won’t sell itself to Flipkart, will go alone

Focus on selling assets, cutting costs to reduce losses

- Mihir Dalal and Anirban Sen

BENGALURU: Snapdeal, run by Jasper Infotech Pvt Ltd, has walked away from a potential sale to Flipkart and will now try and survive as an independen­t entity by selling its logistics unit and cutting costs.

The decision is a win for Snapdeal founders Kunal Bahl (chief executive officer) and Rohit Bansal (chief operating officer), who were against the sale from the beginning. For now, they have won the boardroom battle against Snapdeal’s largest investor SoftBank Group Corp, which was pushing for the sale to Flipkart.

“Snapdeal’s vision has always been to create life-changing experience­s for millions of buyers and sellers across India. We have a new and compelling direction— Snapdeal 2.0—that uniquely furthers this vision, and have made significan­t progress towards the ability to execute this by achieving a gross profit this month. In addition, with the sale of certain non-core assets, Snapdeal is expected to be financiall­y selfsustai­nable,” a Snapdeal spokespers­on said.

In a letter to employees, a copy of which was seen by Mint, Bahl and Bansal said the company was on its way to “upward of ₹150 crore in gross profit over the next 12 months”. It was “financiall­y self-sufficient”, they added, and will not “need to raise additional capital to reach profitabil­ity”.

While the Snapdeal founders got their way, the end of the sale talks comes as a blow to many of the company’s 25-plus institutio­nal investors, who now have no exit option in sight for an investment that has soured badly.

Snapdeal, which has raised roughly $2 billion since starting out in 2010, was in talks to sell itself to Flipkart for $850 million, a fraction of the $6.5 billion valuation it touched in February 2016. Even so, investors and analysts considered the $850 million price tag too high for a company whose monthly gross sales had dropped to less than ₹350 crore — lower than that of Flipkart’s fashion unit Myntra.

A spokespers­on at SoftBank, which has pumped nearly $1 billion into Snapdeal, said the Japanese investor would “look forward” to the results of Snapdeal’s new plan.

SoftBank is separately continuing talks to buy shares worth $1.5 billion in Flipkart, a person familiar with the matter said on condition of anonymity.

“This decision (to stay independen­t) was taken by the founders and the company and SoftBank will support it, since we always support the company and the founders. We’re a shareholde­r. The company had options and this is what it picked,” said Kabir Misra, managing partner at SoftBank.

Snapdeal, which last week sold its payments platform Freecharge for ₹385 crore in cash to Axis Bank, is trying to raise more money by selling its logistics unit Vulcan Express, said two people familiar with the matter, asking not to be identified. In its new avatar, Snapdeal’s main focus will be to cut losses by reducing logistics costs, cutting discounts further, changing its product assortment and reducing its workforce.

Snapdeal plans to reduce its workforce of 1,400 to anywhere between 750 and 900, the two people cited above added. The company wants to tap unorganise­d retail in India and get it online, the people said. The firm will also try and push local commerce by connecting sellers to customers nearby, a fourth person said on condition of anonymity. It will cut its offering of high-value items as well as those products that customers want delivered quickly, the person added.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Snapdeal cofounders Kunal Bahl and Rohit Bansal have been opposing the company’s sale to Flipkart from the beginning
MINT/FILE Snapdeal cofounders Kunal Bahl and Rohit Bansal have been opposing the company’s sale to Flipkart from the beginning

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