Vishal Mega Mart picks 5 bankers for $750 mn IPO
Supermarket chain Vishal Mega Mart Ltd has appointed Kotak Mahindra Capital Co, ICICI Securities, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley and Jefferies as bankers for an initial public offering (IPO) up to $750 million, three people aware of the development said.
The company, which competes with Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Retail, Tata Group’s Trent and grocery giant Avenue Supermarts, is expected to make its IPO filing by the end of the year, the people said on condition of anonymity.
Vishal Mega Mart is owned by Switzerland’s Partners Group and India’s Kedaara Capital. The two private equity firms had acquired it from TPG and Shriram Group for $350 million in 2018. According to the people cited above, the company’s owners expect a valuation of $5 billion.
valuation will be determined by one of the private equity funds supporting the company, though their initial valuation request leans towards the higher end. Nonetheless, the final valuation will be contingent upon the feedback received from the prospective investors,” said one of the three people cited above, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Queries emailed to spokespersons of Kotak Mahindra Capital Co, Morgan Stanley,
ICICI Securities, Kedaara Capital, and Partners Group remained unanswered till press time. Jefferies and JP Morgan declined to comment.
Vishal Mega Mart joins a queue of PE-backed Indian companies seeking an IPO over the next 6-12 months, including Ola Electric, FirstCry, Aadhaar Housing Finance, Indegene and GoDigit.
Unlike D-Mart, Trent and Reliance Retail, which operate company-owned outlets, Vishal Mega Mart has its own stores and franchisee stores. In FY23, it opened 56 franchisee stores, and an average of 64 franchisee stores between FY20 and FY23. It ended 2023 with 589 franchised stores in over 350 cities, with total store area of over 10.6 million sq. ft. The firm’s consolidated revenue grew 36% to ₹7590 crore in FY23, driven by more outlets and steady same-store sales growth.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday raised India's economic growth projection for 2024-25 to 6.8% from 6.5% projected in January. Other major agencies have also made upward revisions, confirming India's status as the fastest-growing major economy. But these forecasts should be read with a pinch of salt. The IMF gives nine projections for GDP for a given year, issued over a span of 24 months. Few of these projections tend to match the eventual growth rate, a Mint analysis of data for the last five years shows. IMF’s quarterly reports have made numerous revisions to India's growth projections, both upwards and downwards—almost in equal measure (barring the pandemic year, when downgrades were common). The World Bank and several private forecasters, too, seldom get it right.
Chart 1. Several major global agencies have revised India’s GDP forecasts upwards 6.8 6.8
6.8 6.8
Chart 3. IMF's report card is full of upgrades and downgrades
Chart 2. Even excusing the covid years, forecasters often get it wrong; here's IMF's example