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Prosus Values BlueStone at USD 950 Mn as Jewellery Brand Eyes IPO
Prosus Values BlueStone at USD 950 Mn as Jewellery Brand Eyes IPO

Entrepreneur

time24-06-2025

  • Business
  • Entrepreneur

Prosus Values BlueStone at USD 950 Mn as Jewellery Brand Eyes IPO

Among its other investments, Prosus highlighted solid returns from PayU India (14% IRR), Swiggy (23%), Meesho (20%), and Eruditus (15%). You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media. Consumer internet brand Prosus has valued Bengaluru-based jewellery retailer BlueStone at approximately USD 950 million, according to its latest annual report. This puts the company just below the USD 1 billion "unicorn" benchmark as it prepares for an initial public offering (IPO). Prosus, a Dutch-listed firm owned by South Africa's Naspers, holds a 4.43% stake in BlueStone through its fund MIH Investments One B.V., which owns 60 lakh equity shares. The investment firm has pegged the fair value of this stake at USD 42 million. BlueStone, led by founder and CEO Gaurav Singh Kushwaha, filed its draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) with India's market regulator SEBI in December 2024. The IPO will include a fresh issue of shares worth up to INR 1,000 crore and an offer for sale of up to 2.39 crore equity shares by existing investors. Meanwhile, The Economic Times reported that wealth management arms of 360 One and Centrum Wealth are likely to participate in a secondary share sale. This transaction aims to provide a full exit to RB Investments and values BlueStone at around USD 1.2 billion—a 30% increase from its INR 8,100 crore (~USD 975 million) valuation in August 2024. Prosus also reported strong financial performance for the year ended March 31, 2025. The company's core headline earnings rose 47% to USD 7.4 billion, while group revenues increased 21% to USD 6.2 billion. Among its other investments, Prosus highlighted solid returns from PayU India (14% IRR), Swiggy (23%), Meesho (20%), and Eruditus (15%). However, its investment in healthcare startup PharmEasy resulted in a negative IRR of 29%. With BlueStone's IPO on the horizon and a higher secondary market valuation, investor interest in the omnichannel jewellery brand appears to be rising.

Dutch investor Prosus pegs IPO-bound Urban Company's fair value at $2.4 billion
Dutch investor Prosus pegs IPO-bound Urban Company's fair value at $2.4 billion

Time of India

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

Dutch investor Prosus pegs IPO-bound Urban Company's fair value at $2.4 billion

Dutch technology investor Prosus has pegged the fair value of at-home services platform Urban Company at $2.4 billion, according to its FY25 annual report. The Gurugram-based firm is among several Prosus-backed Indian startups preparing to go public. Prosus Ventures holds a 6.8% stake in Urban Company, which recently filed a draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) for a Rs 1,900 crore initial public offering (IPO). The offer includes a primary issue of Rs 429 crore and an offer for sale (OFS) of Rs 1,471 crore, through which early investors, including Accel , Elevation Capital, Tiger Global, and Vy Capital, will offload stakes. Over the past year, Urban Company closed multiple pre-IPO secondary transactions at a valuation of around $1.8 billion, ET reported. Another Prosus-backed company, omnichannel jewellery retailer BlueStone, is also gearing up for an IPO . As reported by ET on June 18, the private wealth management arms of 360 One and Centrum Wealth are in talks to facilitate secondary transactions worth Rs 300–350 crore in BlueStone. Both platforms are expected to sell the stakes to their clients ahead of the company's public market debut. The transaction is also likely to value BlueStone at around Rs 10,500 crore ($1.2 billion), about 30% higher than its last reported valuation of Rs 8,100 crore in August 2024, when it raised Rs 900 crore through a mix of primary and secondary funding from investors including Peak XV Partners and Prosus. Discover the stories of your interest Blockchain 5 Stories Cyber-safety 7 Stories Fintech 9 Stories E-comm 9 Stories ML 8 Stories Edtech 6 Stories Meanwhile, ecommerce marketplace Meesho , where Prosus owns about 13%, is expected to file its DRHP in the coming weeks. The company recently completed a reverse flip to shift its domicile to India, a key regulatory requirement ahead of its IPO plans. The listing preparations come amid a broader trend of global investors seeking to partially monetise long-held Indian tech bets, amid signs of a gradual revival in IPO activity. Prosus has been among the most active foreign investors in India's startup ecosystem, with a portfolio spanning fintech, edtech, ecommerce, logistics, and consumer tech.

BlueStone's pre-IPO glow up; PE funds go tech shopping
BlueStone's pre-IPO glow up; PE funds go tech shopping

Economic Times

time18-06-2025

  • Business
  • Economic Times

BlueStone's pre-IPO glow up; PE funds go tech shopping

Ahead of its listing, BlueStone is poised to become India's next unicorn through a secondary deal. This and more in today's ETtech Morning Dispatch. Also in the letter: ■ Google bets on India■ ETtech Done Deals■ 'Safety Charter' for India BlueStone set to enter unicorn club on road to IPO Gaurav Singh Kushwaha, CEO, Bluestone Omnichannel jewellery retailer BlueStone is set to become India's newest unicorn, with a secondary deal valuing the company at around $1.2 billion, ahead of its public listing. Tell me more: The private wealth management arms of 360 One and Centrum Wealth are in advanced discussions for secondary deals valued at Rs 300–350 crore. Both platforms intend to offload their holdings to clients before the Bengaluru-based firm debuts in the public markets. In numbers: The deal values BlueStone at Rs 10,500 crore ($1.2 billion), reflecting a 30% increase from its Rs 8,100 crore (approximately $970 million) valuation in the August 2024 funding round. Lucrative returns: Singapore-based RB Investments will completely exit the company through these transactions. Holding a 2–3% stake, RB is anticipated to achieve a 10–12x return on investment. Catch up, quick: BlueStone submitted the draft prospectus for its IPO to Sebi in December and obtained regulatory approval in April. The offer comprises a fresh issue of shares worth Rs 1,000 crore and an offer-for-sale (OFS) of nearly 24 million shares. Investors including Accel, Saama Capital, IvyCap Ventures, and Kalaari Capital will partially or fully divest through the OFS. PE funds pick up significant stakes in fast-growing tech firms Private equity funds are acquiring significant stakes in rapidly growing technology firms across high-growth sectors. At least four deals have been finalised since the start of 2025, according to investment bankers and industry executives. Deals book: New Mountain Capital acquired a 70–75% stake in Access Healthcare Kedaara Capital invested $350 million in Impetus Technologies HIG Capital picked up a stake worth C$1.3 billion in Converge Technology Solutions Agilitas PE bought a stake worth 300 million euros in Tietoevry Tech Services. Players on the pitch: Active dealmakers include PE funds like Blackstone, Carlyle, EQT Partners, Barings PE Asia and Chryscapital. Most of the recent activity has concentrated on digital engineering and healthcare revenue cycle management (RCM), with at least 70 to 80 new buyers entering the market, said Shobhit Jain, head of enterprise, technology and services at Avendus Capital. Investor interest: This burst of dealmaking follows a strong run of 21 PE-backed deals valued over $300 million between January 2024 and March 2025. By comparison, only nine such deals were recorded in the previous year. But why? India's software products market is projected to grow from $15 billion in FY23 to $44 billion by FY31, according to a March report by SaaSBoomi and 1Lattice. This projection underscores the rising investor confidence and the increasing scope for tech-focused investments. Google 'very bullish' on India, says new country head Preeti Lobana Google remains "very bullish" on India despite macroeconomic headwinds and a slowdown in consumption, Google India country manager Preeti Lobana told us in her first interview since taking charge. Sectors such as gaming, edtech, ecommerce, and quick commerce continue to experience rapid growth, she said. Growth engines: Google is doubling down on its "One Google' approach and artificial intelligence (AI) to drive growth in India. This includes offering a comprehensive suite of solutions—advertising, cloud, and payments—to serve both large enterprises and small businesses. Lobana said Google remains committed to building India-first products. AI strategy: Lobana dismissed concerns about AI chatbots threatening Google's core search product. The company has weathered every major tech shift and emerged stronger, she said. Google is adapting its products to reflect changing consumer habits, including support for longer, more conversational queries. The AI mode in Search will roll out in India shortly, she confirmed. MakeMyTrip plans $3 billion buyback; China's stake to fall below 20% India's largest online travel platform, MakeMyTrip, plans to raise $3 billion through a mix of equity and debt to buy back shares from China's Group. The deal will reduce stake from 19.99% to 45.34%, making it the biggest-ever fundraise by a listed Indian new-age company. Driving the news: board representation will drop from five directors to two. Meanwhile, MakeMyTrip cofounders Deep Kalra and Rajesh Magow, who hold 4.6% voting rights, will retain the right to appoint three independent directors. Backstory: first invested in MakeMyTrip in 2016 via $180 million in convertible bonds. It later acquired Naspers' 42% stake in 2019 through a share swap. Adding context: The buyback follows scrutiny over Chinese ownership amid data security concerns. Rival EaseMyTrip's founder had flagged board influence, which MakeMyTrip dismissed as a 'motivated accusation.' By the numbers: $1.4–1.6 billion via primary equity issuance $1.25 billion via convertible notes, plus a $187.5 million greenshoe option FY25 gross bookings: $9.8 billion; profit: $95.3 million Q4 FY25 gross bookings: $2.5 billion; profit: $29.2 million The big picture: Several Indian startups, including Paytm, Zomato, and Dream Sports, have also cut Chinese holdings in recent years. Secured lender Techfino raises Rs 65 crore from Stellaris, Saison Capital: Non-bank lender Techfino raised Rs 65 crore in equity funding from Stellaris Venture Partners and Saison Capital, the venture arm of Japan's Credit Saison. Razorpay invests $30 million into consumer payments startup Pop: Fintech major Razorpay has invested $30 million in consumer payments platform Pop to help merchants manage rising customer acquisition costs and boost user rewards. Why it matters: Razorpay is doubling down on loyalty and commerce tools after acquiring PoshVine earlier. Other Top Stories By Our Reporters Google releases 'safety charter' for India: The internet major released a 'safety charter' for India to tackle online scams, enhance cybersecurity for government and businesses, and promote responsible AI. Salesforce eyes manufacturing boom in India through AI and cloud solutions: While manufacturing has lagged behind banking and financial services in adopting digital platforms, the situation can be improved with enhanced data and insights, said Arundhati Bhattacharya, Salesforce's president and CEO for South Asia. Global Picks We Are Reading ■ The Trump Mobile T1 Phone looks both bad and impossible (The Verge) ■ Scale AI's Wang brings to Meta knowledge of what everyone else is doing (Bloomberg) ■ Minnesota shooting suspect allegedly used data broker sites to find targets' addresses (Wired) Updated On Jun 18, 2025, 07:16 AM IST

IPO-bound BlueStone geared for unicorn tag
IPO-bound BlueStone geared for unicorn tag

Economic Times

time18-06-2025

  • Business
  • Economic Times

IPO-bound BlueStone geared for unicorn tag

The private wealth management arms of 360 One and Centrum Wealth are in discussions to facilitate secondary deals amounting to Rs 300–350 crore in the jewellery retailer BlueStone, said people in the know. Both platforms will sell the stakes to their clients ahead of the Bengaluru-based company's public market debut, they transaction will value BlueStone at Rs 10,500 crore ($1.2 billion), about 30% higher than its Rs 8,100 crore valuation from the last funding round in August to one of the people in the know, Singapore-based RB Investments will fully exit BlueStone through the deals. RB Investments, which holds a 2–3% stake in the company, is set to make a 10–12x return on its investment. It backed BlueStone across various stages between 2016 and 2019, investing around Rs 28–30 crore. The Singapore-based family office has also backed Indian companies such as Swiggy, Giva and Rebel Foods.'The round took place because there was interest from certain investor classes to pick a stake prior to the IPO,' one of the persons said. 'BlueStone is soon expected to finalise the pricing for the IPO.' A secondary deal is between existing and incoming investors, and the cash doesn't go into the managers pool investment deals for their clients, which typically include the likes of domestic family offices and high networth individuals (HNIs). These investors are usually added to the capitalisation table prior to a public issue. Private wealth management firms have earlier facilitated pre-IPO deals in companies such as food and grocery delivery firm Swiggy, hospitality platform Oyo, logistics startup Shadowfax and business-to-business (B2B) meat company Captain Fresh. BlueStone filed its draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) in December, gaining approval in April. Its IPO includes a fresh capital raise of Rs 1,000 crore and an offer-for-sale (OFS) component of nearly 24 million shares, which will see investors including Accel, Saama Capital, IvyCap Ventures and Kalaari Capital selling their sent to BlueStone founder and CEO Gaurav Singh Kushwaha went unanswered. In response to an emailed query, Centrum Wealth said, 'There may be a few HNI clients who seek exposure, to whom we may facilitate through a market intermediary.'A spokesperson for 360 One said, 'We have no comments on the query.'RB Investments also did not respond. BlueStone had closed a Rs 900-crore funding round—a combination of primary and secondary transactions—in August 2024, which saw the participation of investors such as Peak XV Partners, Prosus, Steadview Capital, Think Investments and Infosys cofounder Kris Gopalakrishnan's family investment office Pratithi Investments. In May this year, BlueStone raised Rs 40 crore in debt from alternative debt platform BlackSoil and Caspian Impact Investments. Over the last few years, investors have turned bullish on the jewellery business. This trend picked up steam after the Tata Group's full acquisition of CaratLane at a valuation of Rs 17,000 crore. The conglomerate had first invested in the startup in 2016, when it was valued at Rs 563 crore. Omnichannel jewellery startup Giva, which specialises in silver products, is also in talks to pick up Rs 450 crore ($53 million) in a financing round led by Creaegis in addition to participation by Premji Invest, Epiq Capital and others. BlueStone closed fiscal 2024 with Rs 1,266 crore in revenue, a 64% jump from the year ago. Its loss during the year contracted to Rs 142 crore in FY24 from Rs 167 crore in fiscal 2023. For the first three months of fiscal 2025, BlueStone reported operating revenue of Rs 348 crore and net loss of Rs 59 crore.

IPO-bound BlueStone geared for unicorn tag
IPO-bound BlueStone geared for unicorn tag

Time of India

time18-06-2025

  • Business
  • Time of India

IPO-bound BlueStone geared for unicorn tag

The private wealth management arms of 360 One and Centrum Wealth are in discussions to facilitate secondary deals amounting to Rs 300–350 crore in the jewellery retailer BlueStone , said people in the know. Both platforms will sell the stakes to their clients ahead of the Bengaluru-based company's public market debut, they said. The transaction will value BlueStone at Rs 10,500 crore ($1.2 billion), about 30% higher than its Rs 8,100 crore valuation from the last funding round in August 2024. According to one of the people in the know, Singapore-based RB Investments will fully exit BlueStone through the deals. RB Investments, which holds a 2–3% stake in the company, is set to make a 10–12x return on its investment. It backed BlueStone across various stages between 2016 and 2019, investing around Rs 28–30 crore. The Singapore-based family office has also backed Indian companies such as Swiggy, Giva and Rebel Foods. 'The round took place because there was interest from certain investor classes to pick a stake prior to the IPO,' one of the persons said. 'BlueStone is soon expected to finalise the pricing for the IPO.' A secondary deal is between existing and incoming investors, and the cash doesn't go into the company. Wealth managers pool investment deals for their clients, which typically include the likes of domestic family offices and high networth individuals (HNIs). These investors are usually added to the capitalisation table prior to a public issue. Private wealth management firms have earlier facilitated pre-IPO deals in companies such as food and grocery delivery firm Swiggy, hospitality platform Oyo, logistics startup Shadowfax and business-to-business (B2B) meat company Captain Fresh. Discover the stories of your interest Blockchain 5 Stories Cyber-safety 7 Stories Fintech 9 Stories E-comm 9 Stories ML 8 Stories Edtech 6 Stories BlueStone filed its draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) in December, gaining approval in April. Its IPO includes a fresh capital raise of Rs 1,000 crore and an offer-for-sale (OFS) component of nearly 24 million shares, which will see investors including Accel , Saama Capital, IvyCap Ventures and Kalaari Capital selling their stakes. Queries sent to BlueStone founder and CEO Gaurav Singh Kushwaha went unanswered. In response to an emailed query, Centrum Wealth said, 'There may be a few HNI clients who seek exposure, to whom we may facilitate through a market intermediary.' A spokesperson for 360 One said, 'We have no comments on the query.' RB Investments also did not respond. BlueStone had closed a Rs 900-crore funding round —a combination of primary and secondary transactions—in August 2024, which saw the participation of investors such as Peak XV Partners, Prosus, Steadview Capital, Think Investments and Infosys cofounder Kris Gopalakrishnan's family investment office Pratithi Investments. In May this year, BlueStone raised Rs 40 crore in debt from alternative debt platform BlackSoil and Caspian Impact Investments. Over the last few years, investors have turned bullish on the jewellery business. This trend picked up steam after the Tata Group's full acquisition of CaratLane at a valuation of Rs 17,000 crore. The conglomerate had first invested in the startup in 2016, when it was valued at Rs 563 crore. Omnichannel jewellery startup Giva, which specialises in silver products, is also in talks to pick up Rs 450 crore ($53 million) in a financing round led by Creaegis in addition to participation by Premji Invest, Epiq Capital and others. BlueStone closed fiscal 2024 with Rs 1,266 crore in revenue, a 64% jump from the year ago. Its loss during the year contracted to Rs 142 crore in FY24 from Rs 167 crore in fiscal 2023. For the first three months of fiscal 2025, BlueStone reported operating revenue of Rs 348 crore and net loss of Rs 59 crore.

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