Flipkart invests Rs 22 billion more in wholesale subsidiary in India

 Flipkart invests Rs 22 billion more in wholesale subsidiary in India

Flipkart has bagged a fund infusion of Rs 21.9 billion (approximately $300 million) for its wholesale arm in India, the second large cash infusion made by the Singapore-based firm since investments from the US retail giant.

According to documents filed with the Registrar of Companies, which were sourced from business intelligence platform Paper.vc, the investment was made by Flipkart Private Limited, Singapore, into Flipkart India Private Limited.

Flipkart’s parent entity had infused Rs 34.6 billion into Flipkart Internet, the marketplace unit, in September, ahead of its Big Billion Days sale. It had also invested Rs 4.5 billion in PhonePe in July, which was a part of the retailer’s commitment of $500 million to its digital payments arm in October 2017.

While Walmart’s $16-billion investment was largely done through secondary share purchases, the US retail giant also invested $2 billion into the firm as fresh equity investment. This capital is what Flipkart is expected to burn as it expands its new categories such as grocery and furniture and battles it out with Amazon.

Amazon, too, had injected Rs 22 billion into its India division, Amazon Seller Services, in November. This was the third infusion in FY19 for Amazon India to counter Flipkart post Walmart’s acquisition.

Amazon India had earlier received Rs 27 billion in August and Rs 26 billion in May.

According to a Barclays report earlier this month, both Amazon India and Flipkart are on a similar run rate of $11.2 billion in GMV for FY19. Hence, in the race to be India’s e-commerce leader, both Flipkart and Amazon are expected to continue to burn cash as they set sights on the next wave of 100 million customers from the untapped tier-II and tier-III markets.

In its report, Barclays had said it expected both Flipkart and Amazon to burn in excess of $1.5 billion each in the 2018-19 fiscal year. Both companies are heavily investing in setting up supply chains, including massive warehouses, apart from burning cash in the form of discounts to lure buyers.

While the country’s online shopper base is estimated to touch 180-200 million by 2020 from 80-90 million in 2017, the online retail market is expected to grow twofold to $40-45 billion by 2020.