THISDAY

Jumia’s Major Investor Seeking Exit from e-Commerce Firm

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German start-up investor, Rocket Internet, which helped to set up Jumia in 2012 is seeking an exit from the consumer electronic­s and fashion retailer, in line with its strategy of selling or listing establishe­d internet firms. The investor is also exploring a stock market listing of the loss-making African online shopping platform, Reuters quoted people close to the matter to have revealed.

The investor is expected to shortly mandate banks for an initial public offering of Jumia.

Berenberg, which has a track record of working with Rocket on capital market transactio­ns, is seen to be in a good position to win a mandate, the people said.

A listing of shares, in a volume of under 200 million euros ($245.7 million), could take place in late 2018 or in 2019, either in Frankfurt or in London, one of the people said.

No informatio­n on Jumia’s valuation was immediatel­y available. Rocket Internet declined to comment.

Last year, Rocket Internet floated online food groupsDeli­very Hero and HelloFresh, while the investor is currently also preparing a flotation of its online furniture retailer Home24.

Rocket Internet Chief Executive, Oliver Samwer, had told Reuters earlier this year that the company needs to hold on to its mountain of cash so it can compete with rivals from the United States and China and pounce when investment opportunit­ies arise.

Jumia has ecommerce operations in 14 countries throughout Africa, a continent with 1.2 billion consumers and 15 million small and medium-sized companies. It also features services such as an online hotel booking and a food delivery platform.

Jumia said in January that it had one billion visits on its pages across Africa in 2017. It has 50,000 merchants in its ecosystem, where fivemillio­n products, hotels, restaurant­s and other services are listed.

According to a presentati­on from Rocket Internet, Jumia saw its adjusted loss before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on widen to 80.7 million euros in the first nine months of 2017. Revenues edged up to 57.3 million euros.

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