Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Founders reap $500 million each after selling BillDesk

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NEW DELHI: When three consultant­s from Arthur Andersen LLP set out to build a digital payments company at the turn of the millennium, the first institutio­nal backer they found was an Indian state-run lender. This week Prosus NV bought BillDesk for $4.7 billion, netting the trio half-a-billion dollars each for their combined 31% stake.

The story of M.N. Srinivasu, Ajay Kaushal and Karthik Ganapathy runs counter to rules in India’s startup textbook. In an age where every funding round is touted in press statements and staff parties, Prosus-owned PayU found itself having to take complete charge of the acquisitio­n announceme­nt because BillDesk had never employed a PR firm.

“We aren’t the typical young startup founders,” Srinivasu said by phone, hastening to add that while Kaushal and he are 53 years old, Ganapathy is “only pushing 50.” “When we started on January 1, 2000, we didn’t have a startup idea. We thought it would be a great opportunit­y to build something at the intersecti­on of tech and financial services, it was just gut-feel.”

While the trio has sold their entire stakes, they will continue to be part of the business, Srinivasu said, without elaboratin­g. The Prosus deal could intensify competitio­n in India’s teeming fintech sector, where he sees enormous opportunit­y for scale as “anyone can move $100 million or $0.05 within seconds at virtually no cost.”

The founders met while working in the financial services practice

at Arthur Andersen and quit in 1999, mere years before the accounting giant combusted in the wake of the Enron Corp. scandal in 2002.

BillDesk’s earliest backer was Bank of Baroda and a fund run by financier Small Industries Developmen­t Bank of India. It would be more than a decadeand-half before big name investors such as Temasek Holdings Pte, Visa Inc. and General Atlantic LLC would come aboard. By then, BillDesk had built a global roster of clients and was offering its gateway to millions of customers making India payments on Amazon.com Inc. or Microsoft Corp.’s LinkedIn service, buying Netflix Inc. subscripti­ons or transactin­g on Apple Inc.’s local online store. BillDesk began exploring an IPO this year and had appointed investment bankers. Then Prosus arrived on the scene weeks ago and offered a 100% buyout.

The lure was clear: More than 800 million Indians are using the internet, and e-commerce is expected to swell at a time when China is cracking down on its tech industry.

BillDesk began when India’s internet user base stood at about 50,000. At one end, the firm’s technology pipe gathered billing data from utilities like power and water suppliers and phone companies. At the other, it collected paper mandates from banks’ customers to debit the payments to these utilities from their accounts. It turned out to be a robust system. Customers no longer needed to line up to pay bills. The explosive growth in digital payments on the back of ubiquitous internet access via smartphone­s gave BillDesk a boost. It now facilitate­s all kinds of payments from insurance to property taxes, and recurring payments like mutual fund investment­s, credit card payments and school fees.

BillDesk, which charged the utility a commission and shared a percentage with the banks, has been profitable since 2007.

 ?? MINT ?? Srinivasu M N, co-founder, BillDesk.
MINT Srinivasu M N, co-founder, BillDesk.

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