Zomato has raised $1 billion through a so-called qualified institutional placement, completing its first major fundraise since its 2021 IPO.
The food delivery and quick-commerce giant issued approximately 336.5 million shares at ₹252.62 each ($3), according to a stock exchange filing on Friday.
The placement, which opened on November 25 and closed on November 28, saw strong participation from leading domestic mutual funds. Motilal Oswal emerged as the largest investor, with its family of funds picking up 20.81% of the issue. ICICI Prudential’s funds secured 12.78%, while HDFC and Kotak funds acquired 8.68% and 5.95% respectively.
The timing of the capital raise is also strategic, coming just weeks after rival Swiggy’s $1.35 billion IPO earlier this month. Zepto, another leading quick commerce startup secured $350 million earlier this month in a deal brokered by Motilal Oswal. Shares of Swiggy dropped 4.1% on Friday, capping this week’s overall rally to 12.8%.
Zomato co-founder and CEO Deepinder Goyal said last month that the firm, which already had $1.3 billion in cash reserves, was seeking the additional funds to maintain competitive parity.
The company, which recently reported its second consecutive quarterly profit, leads India’s quick-commerce market through Blinkit, competing against well-funded rivals like Swiggy, Zepto, and BigBasket in a sector projected to generate over $6.5 billion in annual run-rate revenues.
This is a developing story. More to follow.
Manish Singh is a senior reporter at TechCrunch, covering India’s startup scene and venture capital investments. He also reports on global tech firms’ India play. Before joining TechCrunch in 2019, Singh wrote for about a dozen publications, including CNBC and VentureBeat. He graduated in Computer Science and Engineering in 2015. He is reachable on manish(at)techcrunch(dot)com.
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