News Business Ratan Tata invests in online retailer Snapdeal.com

Ratan Tata invests in online retailer Snapdeal.com

New Delhi: Ratan Tata, 73, chairman emeritus of Tata Sons, the holding company of the $103 billion-in-revenues Tata conglomerate, with interests spanning steel, software, airlines and tea, has made a personal investment in leading Indian

ratan tata invests in online retailer snapdeal.com ratan tata invests in online retailer snapdeal.com
New Delhi: Ratan Tata, 73, chairman emeritus of Tata Sons, the holding company of the $103 billion-in-revenues Tata conglomerate, with interests spanning steel, software, airlines and tea, has made a personal investment in leading Indian online retailer, Snapdeal.

"Tata has made a personal investment in the company," Snapdeal cofounder and CEO Kunal Bahl said. The investment amount, however, was not disclosed.

"This stands testimony to the growth and success that we have seen in a short span of 4 years," Bahl said.

Snapdeal, which has raised about $400 million since its inception, has invested about $100 million in logistics and operations to expand its presence in the $3 billion Indian eCommerce market.

"An investment by a legendary and respected figure like Tata is an excellent validation of our focused strategy on building a long term enterprise and marks the start of a very important phase for the company," Bahl said.

Snapdeal has seen 600% growth year-on-year for the last two years, he added.

Snapdeal currently houses over 5 million products across 500 diverse categories from over 50,000 sellers.

The city-based firm had raised $100 million (about Rs 600 crore) in May from Temasek, BlackRock Inc, Myriad, Premji Invest and Tybourne, while in February, it had received funding worth $133.7 million (about Rs 830 crore) from its existing investor, eBay and others.

A report by consulting firm Technopak pegs the $2.3 billion e-tailing market to reach $32 billion by 2020.

Snapdeal rival Flipkart on July 29 announced a $1 billion funding, which is the largest in the fledgling ecommerce sector. A day later, world's largest e-tailer Amazon said it will pump in $2 billion to bolster business here.

Another report by consultancy firm PwC and industry body Assocham suggests that e-commerce firms are expected to spend up to $1.9 billion by 2017-2020 on infrastructure, logistics and warehousing.

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