Byju’s in funding talks with TPG, sovereign funds as debt weighs
Several investment firms including TPG and two Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds have begun due diligence on the Indian company, which is hoping to keep its valuation steady at about $22 billion during the financing, people familiar with the matter said. That’s despite a global tech rout that’s prompted layoffs in the thousands, depressed global investment activity and shaved billions off the valuations of once high-flying tech startups.
Negotiations are ongoing and it’s unclear if the prospective investors will go ahead with a deal, the people said, who asked not to be identified as the information is private. Byju’s, which grappled with mounting losses after the pandemic-era boom in online tutoring petered out, is in separate talks with creditors to renegotiate an agreement governing a $1.2 billion loan that’s in breach of covenants.
Also read: Layoffs in 2023: a list of Indian startups & tech companies that have cut jobs
Representatives for Byju’s and TPG declined to comment.
Founded in 2015 and formally known as Think & Learn Pvt., the Bangalore-headquartered startup shelved plans for a stock-market debut last year as global markets slumped. It last raised funds in October at a $22 billion valuation, days after announcing it would reduce its workforce by 5%.
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Also read: Byju’s continues to cut jobs, another 1,000 employees laid offBacked by the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, General Atlantic and Tiger Global, Byju’s raised billions of dollars in capital to finance a global acquisition spree in the face of a tech downturn worldwide. The company, which had at one point 150 million users, has since been plagued by challenges including a long-delayed filing of audited financial statements and a truncated fundraising last year.
The company in 2022 filed its audited financial results for the year ending March 2021 showing steep losses. And last year, it said it would shed 2,500 workers or about 5% of its total workforce and lower its marketing and sales costs, pledging to become profitable by March.
Founder Byju Raveendran — a son of teachers and a former educator himself — is now working on that turnaround plan, pledging a recovery this year. He’s explored options including using his shares as collateral to raise funds and lift his stake in the company to as high as 40%. It’s also finalizing plans for a $1 billion initial public offering of tutoring business Aakash Educational Services, and may consider IPOs of other units.
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