On May 13, Antfin sold 2.54 crore shares of Paytm at an average price of Rs 824.6 a share
The Alibaba group entity will sell 4% of its stake in Paytm on Tuesday; Floor price set at Rs 809.75 apiece.
Ant Financial and Alipay, through which Alibaba has invested in Zomato, would bring down their stake to about 10 percent, by selling shares in Zomato at a 5-6 percent discount, CNBC Awaaz has said
The Chinese authorities’ overbearing attitude underscores the perils of Shanghai becoming a financial hub
Spun-off from Jack Ma’s Alibaba Group, Ant Financial’s IPO has been the poster child of China’s post-coronavirus economic recovery. Retail investors alone splurged almost $3 trillion in "frenzied bids" for shares.
Ant Group was valued at $150 billion in its previous funding round.
The funding push comes amid nationwide protests by restaurants, partners and industry associations against Zomato’s 'deep discounting' policies; and will also help bolster the company against competitor Swiggy
The odds are stacked against Paytm. In every business segment, Paytm founder Vijay Shekhar Sharma is fighting against multiple, focussed players and with cash burning capacity. Sustenance is becoming a question, forget leadership in its markets.
The development would be in line with the company's interest in expanding beyond China.
The latest round of funding worth nearly $1 billion might also see US asset manager T Rowe Price investing around $150 million to $200 million in the digital payments player One97 Communications, which is the parent company running Paytm.
Ctrip buying into MakeMyTrip is the latest among Chinese firms nibbling at India’s new-age firms. This could set the alarm bells ringing elsewhere
Zomato is reportedly in discussions with Chinese private equity major Primavera Capital, existing backer Ant Financial and other investors for the new round of funding
A deal would mark the latest stage of consolidation in China's once-booming bike-sharing industry, where a series of startups have burned through hundreds of millions of dollars in the fight to dominate key cities, littering the streets with thousands of bikes in the process.
The firm, which also raised its guidance for the year ahead, will take a 33 percent stake in payment affiliate Ant Financial, an important step ahead of an expected initial public offering (IPO) by Ant, valued at $60 billion in 2016.
China is disappointed that the Ant Financial-Moneygram deal was rejected on national security grounds, ministry spokesman Gao Feng said in a regular briefing.
The deal is the latest and most high-profile transaction to be refiled this year with the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), a secretive government panel which reviews acquisitions by foreign entities for potential national security risks.
Ant, the finance affiliate of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, increased its bid to USD 18 per share in cash from USD 13.25 to value MoneyGram at around USD 1.2 billion.
"Users in Canada will now be able to pay for their cell phone, cable, internet, electricity and water bills. In addition to this, users will also be able to pay for their insurance and property taxes by using the new Paytm Canada app," Paytm said in a statement.
Reliance Capital had invested Rs 10 crore to acquire its stake in the payment and e-commerce company and retains it free of cost.
The USD 255 billion Chinese group and Paytm have already invested together to build a dominant mobile-wallet payment business, now worth around USD 5 billion. Their smaller e-commerce unit is now being separated out to meet Indian regulations.
The sources said companies being considered for the shortcut could include Alibaba Group's Ant Financial affiliate, the world's most valuable financial technology company; Zhong An Online Property and Casualty Insurance, and security software maker Qihoo 360 Technology Co.
The investment in Kakao Pay comes less than a month after Ant bought US-based payments operator MoneyGram for around USD 880 million and struck a partnership deal with Thailand's Ascend Money in November.
"The acquisition of MoneyGram is a significant milestone in our mission to bring inclusive financial services to users around the world," Eric Jing, chief executive officer of Ant Financial Services Group in a statement last night.
Sources with knowledge of the plans said Ant Financial, whose anchor business is Alipay, China's largest online payments service, is focusing on expanding its existing 450 million-strong army of daily users, adding merchants and customers.