HomeNewsBusinessStartupLocal businesses, HNIs pile into bourse-bound Snapdeal, as Alibaba exits the firm

Local businesses, HNIs pile into bourse-bound Snapdeal, as Alibaba exits the firm

The development comes after India subjected Chinese investments to extra scrutiny last year after their soldiers clashed on the border and New Delhi worried about investors from the neighbour doing opportunistic takeovers during the pandemic.

December 30, 2021 / 17:07 IST
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A private security gurad stands at a gate of Snapdeal headquarters in Gurugram on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, April 3, 2017. Picture taken April 3. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi - RTX33YCH
A private security gurad stands at a gate of Snapdeal headquarters in Gurugram on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, April 3, 2017. Picture taken April 3. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi - RTX33YCH

Domestic businesses and high net worth individuals have invested in Snapdeal ahead of its initial public offering, buying out Chinese giant Alibaba from the New Delhi-based ecommerce firm amid heightened scrutiny of bets originating from the east Asian country.

Promoters of Havells India and Asian Paints such as QRG Investments, Rupen Investment and Centaurus Trading have invested in Snapdeal, as per the draft documents filed for the Rs 1,250 crore IPO. 

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Chinese ecommerce entity Alibaba sold 4.4% stake in the round that saw participation of individuals including Borosil managing director Priyanka Shreevar Kheruka, Edelweiss Mutual Fund MD Radhika Gupta, and former Snapdeal executive Jason Kothari.

Moneycontrol was the first to report that an investor was looking for an exit ahead of the IPO.