Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Oyo raises $1 bn to fund overseas expansion plan

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GROWING FOOTPRINT Latest funding round values Oyo Hotels at $5 billion BENGALURU:

Oyo Hotels, an Indian startup for booking reliable rooms in the country’s chaotic lodging market, is raising $1 billion to fund expansion into China and other global regions.

Existing investors including SoftBank Vision Fund, Sequoia Capital and Lightspeed Venture Partners have put in $800 million, with commitment­s for another $200 million, the company said on Tuesday.

About $600 million of the total will be plowed into China where Oyo began operations only 10 months ago. The funding values the startup at $5 billion, according to a person familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified because the matter is private.

Ritesh Agarwal, a 24-year-old college dropout, founded Oyo five years after travelling around India on a shoestring budget.

He discovered wildly unpredicta­ble standards for hotels and guest houses, and decided to start an online service to bring more reliabilit­y to the travel experience. In the past two years, Oyo has expanded beyond India into China, Malaysia, Nepal and Britain.

“With this additional funding, we plan to rapidly scale our business in these countries, while continuing to invest further in technology and talent,” Agarwal said in the statement.

“We will also deploy fresh capital to take our unique model that enables small hotel owners to create quality living spaces, global.”

His startup, whose official name is Oravel Stays Pvt., signs on hotel owners and then gets them to upgrade everything from linen, toiletries and bath- room fittings to its specificat­ions. It also equips hotels with staff training and standardiz­ed supplies.

It then brings them on board its hotel website, where rooms start at $25 per night. Hotel owners pay Oyo a 25% commission.

“Budget travellers are consistent­ly shortchang­ed by the lack of trust, quality, and consistenc­y,” said Bejul Somaia, managing director of Lightspeed India, explaining that Oyo can change that dynamic.

At a $5 billion valuation, Oyo would be India’s most-valuable startup after One97 Communicat­ions, the parent of digital payments pioneer Paytm. Flipkart Online Services Pvt. had been the most valuable startup in the country, but the online retailer has been acquired by US retail giant Walmart Inc. earlier this year.

India’s hotel industry includes large chains with dependable hospitalit­y experience­s at the mid to top end. But the business also includes thousands of unbranded, ramshackle hotels and lodges with broken beds, yellowing linen and stinking bathrooms. Oyo is trying to make hotels easier to find through its site and more predictabl­e as well.

Its criteria are exacting —from the thickness of the mattress to the placement of the light switches to the size of the showerhead in the bathroom. Agarwal has said that he wants the Oyo brand to convey a superior experience.

Oyo began with one hotel in Gurugram and has grown to 125,000 rooms in India, where it says it’s tripling year-over-year in terms of transactio­ns. In China, where it began operations last November, it has expanded to 171 cities with 87,000 rooms. It is now in over 350 cities with 211,000 rooms.

The Flipkart acquisitio­n was seen in India as an example of the country’s growing success in building valuable startups.

Walmart acquired 77% of the business for $16 billion as the US retailer seeks to compete with Amazon.com Inc. in the country.

SOFTBANK VISION FUND, SEQUOIA CAPITAL AND LIGHTSPEED HAVE PUT IN $800 MN, WITH COMMITMENT­S FOR ANOTHER $200 MN

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Ritesh Agarwal, a 24yearold college dropout, founded Oyo five years after travelling around India on a shoestring budget
MINT/FILE Ritesh Agarwal, a 24yearold college dropout, founded Oyo five years after travelling around India on a shoestring budget

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