Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Flipkart’s Bansals lose billionair­e status

- Mihir Dalal mihir.d@livemint.com

Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal, co-founders of India’s most valuable Internet firm Flipkart, lost their billionair­e status after Flipkart’s valuation fell in its latest funding round.

Their fortunes are now worth $650-750 million each after the e-commerce firm’s valuation reduced to $11.6 billion in its funding round of $1.4 billion announced on Monday, according to Mint research.

The Bansals became the first Internet billionair­es in 2015 when Flipkart raised $700 million at a valuation of $15 billion. Their fortunes were then estimated to be worth roughly $1.3 billion each, according to Forbes magazine.

While that is a fall, they are still among the top three richest Internet entreprene­urs, behind Paytm’s Vijay Shekhar Sharma, who is the only Internet billionair­e currently.

Sachin and Binny, who are in their mid-30s, started Flipkart in a two-bedroom apartment in Bengaluru as an online bookseller inspired by their previous employer Amazon, the giant American online retailer that is Flipkart’s arch rival now.

The two are now out of operationa­l roles at Flipkart.

Sachin became executive chairman in January 2016, when Binny replaced him as chief executive officer. Exactly a year later, Binny himself was replaced as CEO by Kalyan Krishnamur­thy, a representa­tive of Tiger Global Management, Flipkart’s largest investor.

Binny is now group chief executive officer. There’s no specific plan. With the fund-raise we are quite well-capitalise­d and all existing and new investors are equally excited about building a very large e-commerce business and really making We don’t have any specific plans. The next 2-3 years will be focused on executing on the agenda of the growth portfolio, profitabil­ity and the growth agenda on the new portfolio. As is the case in general, we keep talking to investors. We’re not commenting. We focus on our customers Other categories are growing faster than mobiles. So over the next two to three years, we see mobiles being a much smaller part of the portfolio. For today, fashion, large appliances and mobiles are the main categories.

Two years from now, we want furniture and groceries to also become core categories.

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