Global Times

Paytm’s IPO shows importance of Chinese investors

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Alibaba- backed Indian digital payment firm Paytm is reportedly preparing for a massive IPO that would be the largest in India, which underscore­s the importance of Chinese investment for India’s internet industry, analysts said on Sunday.

However, Paytm may be the last Indian start- up to achieve such great success with the support of Chinese investment­s, as investors are shunning investment in India amid tense bilateral relations, analysts noted.

Paytm has hired four banks, including JP Morgan Chase & Co and Goldman Sachs Group Inc, for its proposed IPO, through which the start- up aims to raise up to 218 billion rupees ($ 3 billion), Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

Alibaba Group and its Ant Financial hold almost 37 percent of Paytm’s parent firm One97 Communicat­ions, according to media reports.

Richard Ma, a veteran in the internet industry, told the Global Times that Paytm is a rare success in the internet sector in India, where the developmen­t of most internet startups has come to a standstill with the retreat of Chinese investment.

“Only several larger internet companies with a US background, for example Uber and Uber Eats, are running well in India,” he said, noting that the number of Indian startups backed by Chinese investors has plunged.

With a similar developmen­t path and population size, India used to be a sound investment destinatio­n for Chinese internet firms, which has accumulate­d vast capital and experience at the home market.

However, Chinese investment in Indian start- ups rapidly slowed in 2020 amid geopolitic­al tensions between China and India.

“Ignoring common internatio­nal business standards, India’s unreasonab­le and persistent crackdown on Chinese companies has led to the loss of a group of important investors that have capital, cutting- edge technologi­es, strong innovation capability and rich experience to scale up businesses,” said Dai Yonghong, a professor of the Institute of South Asia Studies at Sichuan University.

He said that this would have a negative impact on Indian internet users, the developmen­t of the country’s internet sector and even its industrial upgrade in the long run.

Ma said that his company had abandoned a news app project developed in India in 2020 amid political uncertaint­ies and low returns on investment­s.

“We have now shifted to focus on Europe, Latin America and other more promising markets,” he said, adding that he would not consider the Indian market, even if the downward trajectory in China- India relations changed.

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