Food delivery startup Swiggy is in advanced talks to raise as much as $1 billion from investors, including $300-500 million from SoftBank Group, stealing a march on rival Zomato, which was also wooing the Japanese firm for a mega investment, four people familiar with the development said.
If the deal goes through, it will be SoftBank’s first direct investment in a food tech business in India. It has been in talks with the two leading food tech rivals, Swiggy and Zomato, since August.
“SoftBank wasn’t sure who the clear winner was between Swiggy and Zomato (at that time). It found the valuation of both companies very high,” said one of the people cited above, requesting anonymity. What probably tilted things in Swiggy’s favour was its fast ramp-up and an investment validation from Naspers in December.
While the talks have been on since the last quarter of 2018, details of the deal are emerging only now, one of the people cited above said on the condition of anonymity.
When contacted, a SoftBank spokesperson said: “We do not comment on speculation.”
However, a person with direct knowledge of the transaction said: “Talks are on but many such talks are on that don’t come to fruition.” A Swiggy spokesperson said: “Will revert on this in case we have anything to share.”
Founded in 2014, Swiggy became a unicorn—a startup valued at more than $1 billion—last year. The Bengaluru-based firm has so far raised $1.5 billion from several investors, including Russia’s DST Global, South Africa’s Naspers, Accel and Norwest Venture Partners. Run by Bundl Technologies Pvt. Ltd, Swiggy raised a large part of its funding last year across three funding rounds.
In December, it raised a whopping $1 billion from Naspers in what was the biggest ever funding round in India’s food tech industry. At a valuation of $3.3 billion, it became the fifth-most valued startup in the country.
SoftBank’s interest in Swiggy highlights its interest in the consumer space at large. In India, it has invested in firms such as Brainbees Solutions Pvt. Ltd, which operates online-first baby products retailer FirstCry, grocery delivery firm Grofers, ride-sharing app Ola and hospitality chain Oyo, among others.
Globally, it has invested in San Francisco-based online retailer Brandless, South Korea’s largest e-commerce firm Coupang, sports e-commerce company Fanatics, indoor vertical farming company Plenty, Indonesia’s largest online marketplace Tokopedia and on-demand walking and dog care startup Wag, among others.
Those who have been tracking SoftBank’s investment bets in India say the Japanese giant has been keen on the consumer space since the very beginning as it offers scale and scope to grow fast.
“The scale that can be achieved in the consumer space is difficult to get in the non-consumer space. With the size of the fund (Vision Fund at $100 billion) that SoftBank manages, it makes sense for them to keep looking for scalable opportunities in the consumer space which can absorb large investments and offer a position of leadership with almost no scope for competition to come.
“Also, India constitutes almost 16-17% of the world population; hence with a large domestic market to serve, any opportunity they invest in offers big market to serve—be it Swiggy or Ola or Flipkart,” said Anil Joshi, managing partner at Unicorn India Ventures, a venture capital firm.
This article was first published on livemint.com.