Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp, Snapdeal’s biggest investor, is
looking to sell firm to Flipkart.
The board of Indian online marketplace Snapdeal has rejected
a bid worth $700 million-$800 million from Flipkart after due diligence by its
bigger rival, Mintnewspaper reported on Tuesday.
Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp, Snapdeal’s biggest investor, is
looking to sell the firm to Flipkart to secure a stake in India’s largest
e-commerce player.
The offer by Bengaluru-headquartered Flipkart last week is
only for the Snapdeal online marketplace and doesn’t include the company’s
logistics arm Vulcan Express or its digital payments unit FreeCharge, Mint said
quoting three anonymous sources.
SoftBank declined comment while Snapdeal, its shareholders
Nexus Venture Partners and Kalaari Capital, and Flipkart were not immediately
available for comment.
Snapdeal has been expected to fetch at least $1 billion from
its sale to Flipkart.
Negotiations to continue
Negotiations between the two companies will continue, a
person familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Flipkart did not give any reason for “knocking down”
Snapdeal’s valuation, the source added.
As part of the proposed transaction, SoftBank would invest
about $1 billion in Flipkart through a direct cash infusion and by buying
equity stakes in its investors such as Tiger Global, according to sources.
Source: The Hindu

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