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    Tech stocks tank on manic Monday; Swiggy turns decacorn


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    Shares of Zomato, Paytm, Nykaa, Policybazaar and Cartrade took a beating on Monday, hitting all-time lows amid a brutal sell-off in global tech stocks over the past week. An analyst said the bulk of the selling globally involves non-profitable tech stocks, which isn’t exactly good news for three of these five companies.

    Also in this letter:
    ■ Swiggy turns decacorn after closing $700 million round
    ■ Ola Electric raises $200 million at $5 billion valuation
    ■ Indian firms to spend $105.2 billion on IT in 2022: report

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    Tech stocks hit all-time lows amid brutal sell-off

    Tech firm shares

    Shares of new-age companies fell sharply as the Sensex and Nifty tanked on Monday following weak global cues. The Sensex lost 1,546 points or 2.6% to end at 57,492, while the Nifty declined 468 points or 2.7% to close at 17,149.

    Shares of new-age firms

    Taking stock: Shares of Zomato, Nykaa, Paytm, Policybazaar and Cartrade hit all-time lows.

    • Zomato dropped 19% to hit a low of Rs 91.70 in early trade and closed the day 19.62% down at Rs 91.35. The company’s shares have fallen about 30.5% in the past five trading sessions and 45% from their 52-week high of Rs 169.10 on November 16.
    • Nykaa, which opened the day at Rs 1,975, dropped more than 13% to Rs 1,735.95. The scrip has plummeted more than 30% from its all-time high in November.
    • PB Fintech, the parent company of PolicyBazaar, slumped 11.38% to Rs 766 at one point before ending the day at Rs 777.15, more than 10% down. The stock is now down about 50% from its peak.
    • Paytm’s parent firm One97 Communications dropped 8% to Rs 881.50 at one point before closing the day at Rs 917.45, down 4.46%. The stock has lost about 60% of its value from the issue price of Rs 2,150.
    • Cartrade closed the day at Rs 768.25, down 5.47%.

    Was waiting for this, says Zomato CEO: As Zomato's stock fell sharply, founder and CEO Deepinder Goyal told employees the crash was likely "on account of a global sell-off in growth tech stocks", which has also impacted the likes of Doordash, Hero, Netflix and Peloton.

    He added that he had been waiting for a bear market. “Also, let me tell you a secret… I have been waiting for a bear market for a long time now. That is when funding dries up for everyone, and companies with the most solid teams and execution rise to the top,” he wrote in a note on the company’s internal chat group, which ET has reviewed.

    It was coming: New-age stocks were in for a selloff amid broader selling of IT stocks globally. They have been under tremendous selling pressure due to their high valuations and negative bottom lines.

    VK Vijayakumar, chief investment strategist at Geojit Financial Services, termed last week’s sell-off in tech stocks “brutal”.

    "An important feature of the tech sell-off is that bulk of the selling is happening in non-profitable tech stocks. This trend is impacting stocks like Zomato and Paytm in India too," he added.

    Echoing his views, Harsh Patidar, BFSI analyst at CapitalVia Global Research, said global markets Indian tech firms were seeing the effects of the global sell-off in technology stocks and would come under increasing pressure. "Higher Inflation and rising bond yields hurt new-age companies," he said.
    Swiggy turns decacorn after closing $700 million round

    Swiggy

    Swiggy has closed a $700 million funding round led by asset manager Invesco, confirming what we reported last September.

    Details: The round values the company at $10.7 billion, making Swiggy a ‘decacorn’, two sources told us.

    It involved a host of new investors such as Baron Capital Group, Sumeru Venture, IIFL AMC Late Stage Tech Fund, Kotak, Axis Growth Avenues AIF- I, Sixteenth Street Capital, Ghisallo, Smile Group and Segantii Capital.

    Existing investors Prosus, Alpha Wave Global, Qatar Investment Authority and ARK Impact also participated.

    We had reported in September that the company's valuation jump was a re-rating exercise for the firm, then valued at $5.5 billion, on the back of Zomato’s bumper listing in July. However, Zomato’s stock has been slipping amid a broader dip in the markets.

    Zomato Chart
    (Source: Yahoo Finance)

    Last April, Swiggy had raised $1.25 billion from SoftBank, Accel, Prosus and others.

    Quote: “The GMV (gross merchandise value) our food delivery business achieved in 40 months, took Instamart just 17 months, demonstrating the platform benefits of Swiggy. We will double down on this to build more categories in line with our mission of offering unparalleled convenience to Indian consumers,” said Sriharsha Majety, co-founder and chief executive, Swiggy.

    Quick commerce push: Swiggy is making inroads in the highly contested instant grocery delivery space with Instamart. In an interview with ET last month, Majety had said that the company was committing $700 million to push Instamart.

    Swiggy

    Swiggy said on Monday it expects Instamart’s annualised gross merchandise value (GMV) run rate to cross $1 billion in the next three quarters.

    Swiggy’s quick commerce vertical faces competition from Zomato-backed Blinkit (previously Grofers), six-month-old rival Zepto, and Ola, which has started testing its quick grocery service in Bengaluru and Mumbai.
    Ola Electric raises $200 million at $5 billion valuation

    Ola Electric

    Ola Electric has raised $200 million from Tekne Private Ventures, Alpine Opportunity Fund, Edelweiss and others. Following this round of funding, Ola's EV vertical is valued at $5 billion.

    In September, Ola Electric had said it had raised a similar amount from Falcon Edge, SoftBank and others at a $3 billion valuation.

    This is Ola Electric's seventh fundraising--excluding the $100 million it received from Bank of Baroda-- since inception. The company counts Hyundai Motor Co. Ltd., Tiger Global, Matrix Partners India and Ratan Tata as among its investors.

    In December, the company raised Rs 398.26 crore (about $52.7 million) in a financing round led by Temasek.

    Set up in 2017 to run e-taxis, Ola Electric diversified into manufacturing EVs after the Covid-19 pandemic crippled its ride-hailing business. In February, it launched the Ola Futurefactory—touted as the world's biggest electric two-wheeler plant—near Krishnagiri in Tamil Nadu.

    Ola is also getting into the used car business, even as its taxi vertical is showing signs of a revival.

    ETtech done deals


    Deals

    ■ Dentalcare startup Smiles.ai said that it has raised $23 million in a funding round led by Alpha Wave Incubation, with participation from existing investors Sequoia Capital India and Chiratae Ventures.

    ■ Chennai-based baby care startup Baby Amore has raised undisclosed external funding from GetVantage, India's largest revenue-based financing fintech platform and marketplace. With these funds, it plans to expand its business by providing customers an omnichannel shopping experience, and go aggressive with its brand-building strategy.

    Tweet of the day


    Indian firms to spend $105.2 billion on IT in 2022: report

    India firms

    Indian companies will spend an estimated $105.2 billion on IT in 2022, 5.5% more than in 2021, according to a report by research and consulting company Gartner. The report said that despite the potential impact of the Omicron variant, companies will continue to increase their investments in tech.

    Outlook: Gartner forecasts that the IT services segment – which includes consulting and managed services – to have the second-highest spending growth in 2022, reaching $1.3 trillion, up 7.9% from 2021. Business and technology consulting spending, specifically, is expected to grow 10% in 2022, it said.

    It added that worldwide IT spending is projected to total $4.5 trillion in 2022, an increase of 5.1% from the previous year.

    Quote: “2022 is the year that the future returns for the chief information officer (CIO). They are now in a position to move beyond the critical, short-term projects over the past two years and focus on the long term. Simultaneously, staff skill gaps, wage inflation and the war for talent will push CIOs to rely more on consultancies and managed service firms to pursue their digital strategies,” John-David Lovelock, vice president for research at Gartner said.

    Gartner expects the vast majority of large organisations to use external consultants to develop their cloud strategy over the next few years, Lovelock said.

    Digital infra needs: Separately, a joint report by EY and Digital Infrastructure Providers Association (DIPA) showed that India's digital infrastructure needs investments of up to $23 billion by 2025 to support the growing demand of digital services and rising online traffic.

    • "Whether it is health tech, edutech, consumer tech India is leading the way. We will see a $200 billion ecommerce market, $12 billion edutech market," EY emerging markets TMT leader Prashant Singhal said.

    According to the EY-DIPA joint report, as many as 330 million people will be using 5G and sectors like ecommerce, education, healthcare will grow their presence online.

    By the numbers: EY estimates investments in the range of $ 17-23 billion will be required in the segment by 2025. This comprises investment in the range of $7 billion to $9 billion each for macro tower additions and fibre deployments, $2-3 billion for outdoor small cells which will be important for 5G roll out, $500-800 million in Wi-Fi and in-building solutions, $500-700 million in edge data centres and $500 million in data centres.
    Demand for flexible spaces may hit a new high in 2022

    Flexible spaces

    Seat transactions in flexible spaces are expected to hit a new high in 2022 as demand for them grows amid the pandemic, according to top international property consultants and flexible space providers.

    Coworking operators sold over 55,000 seats in 2021, up from 36,000 seats in 2020, according to property experts, who expect sales to double in 2022.

    Rise of flexible spaces: Flexibility has emerged as the key factor for many occupiers over the last 12-18 months as they struggled with hybrid work models.

    Quote: “We expect demand to remain robust in 2022, in line with the rise of productivity as a service in the enterprise flex model. Besides productivity, continued and growing preference for capex light/short-term space solutions that are in line with core plus flex strategies suggests that demand could hit a new record in 2022,” said Badal Yagnik, managing director-tenant representation, Cushman & Wakefield.

    Today’s ETtech Top 5 newsletter was curated by Arun Padmanaban in New Delhi and Zaheer Merchant in Mumbai.

    Updated On Jan 26, 2022, 11:36 AM IST

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    The Economic Times