News Business Flipkart Said to Be Readying Up to $950 Million Offer for Snapdeal

Flipkart Said to Be Readying Up to $950 Million Offer for Snapdeal

The new offer almost matches the initial asking price of $1 billion for acquisition of the beleaguered e-commerce marketplace, sources privy to the development said

Flipkart's new offer almost matches the initial asking price of $1 billion  Image Source : PTIFlipkart's new offer almost matches the initial asking price of $1 billion

E-commerce major Flipkart is expected to make a revised offer of $900-950 million (roughly Rs. 5,800 crores - Rs. 6,122 crores) for buying rival Snapdeal, according to sources.

The new offer almost matches the initial asking price of $1 billion for acquisition of the beleaguered e-commerce marketplace, sources privy to the development said.

They did not wish to be identified as discussions are still on and the deal has not been signed yet.

One of the sources said a new offer of $900-950 million is likely to be made by early next week.

When contacted, Snapdeal, SoftBank and Flipkart declined to comment.

Snapdeal's board has already rejected a takeover offer of $800-850 million (around Rs. 5,500 crores) from Flipkart as it felt the amount undervalued the company given that the due diligence report was clean.

SoftBank, Snapdeal's largest investor, has been proactively mediating the sale for the past few months. The board of Snapdeal also has representation from its founders (Kunal Bahl and Rohit Bansal), Nexus Venture Partners and Kalaari Capital.

Snapdeal is also engaged in separate discussions for selling FreeCharge (mobile wallet operations) and Vulcan Express (logistics arm).

These deals are also likely to be closed over the next few weeks.

The deal between Snapdeal and Flipkart, if completed, would mark the biggest acquisition in the Indian e-commerce space.

One of the leading contenders in the Indian e-tailing segment, Snapdeal has seen its fortunes failing amid strong competition from Amazon and Flipkart.

Snapdeal's valuations have also plummeted from about $6.5 billion in February 2016. SoftBank has already written off over $1 billion on valuation of its investment in Snapdeal.

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