Exclusive: Dunzo eyes $100 million via convertible notes amid tough equity funding market
The round is in advanced stages of closure and could finally settle in the range of $70-100 million, the people said. The Bengaluru-based startup was initially looking to raise at least $150 million by selling a stake but its decision to opt for convertible notes underscores the ongoing funding winter for large startups which need capital to sustain their businesses. “It will settle closer to $100 million but definitely not anywhere closer to $150 million,” said one of the people familiar with the discussions.
Raising funds through convertible notes, a popular instrument now among growth- to late-stage startups, will allow Dunzo to not ascribe itself a valuation immediately when investors are being cautious.
The quick-commerce model, where platforms promise grocery delivery within 15-30 minutes, has seen a sharp reversal of sentiment from investors in India and globally amid the liquidity squeeze.
Also read | ETtech Long Read: Quick commerce may find it tough to bag new users, investors in 2023
For Dunzo, which was last valued at around $775 million in January 2022, its largest investor Reliance Retail is likely to cut a relatively smaller cheque in this round than last time, people briefed on the matter said.
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The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) is among new investors who are likely to join this round. The sovereign wealth fund is an investor in Reliance’s Jio Platforms. Sources said Dunzo had held talks also with Singapore’s Temasek as well, but those seem to have fallen through.
“Most late-stage startups are raising capital through instruments that don’t impact their valuation amid a tightening funding environment,” said the person quoted earlier. “They (Dunzo) are still trying to bring one or two more external investors to join the round.”
“The due diligence has also now closed for this round which was done by one of the Big Four (accounting) firms,” another person said.
Dunzo chief executive Kabeer Biswas and a spokesperson for ADIA declined to comment. Emails sent to Reliance Retail and Temasek didn’t elicit any response till press time Thursday.
Reliance Retail owns 25.8% in Dunzo. Google is another major investor, with a stake of just under 20%.
Venture funding for startups in 2022 fell around 30% to nearly $24 billion, according to data from industry tracker Venture Intelligence.
Nearly 64% of the respondents to
ET’s State of Startups survey, as reported on December 30, had said they expected an improvement in funding scenario only by the second half of 2023, while more than 21% said it could even get worse in 2023 compared with the year before.
Quick cost optimisations
Dunzo has been trying to optimise costs internally at its quick-service business, similar to rivals like Swiggy’s Instamart, Zepto, Zomato-owned Blinkit and BigBasket’s BB Now. Among the quick commerce players, BB Now, a late entrant, is the only player expanding aggressively on the back of new funding from parent Tata Digital and other investors.
ET reported on Wednesday
about the challenges 30-minute delivery platforms are facing to scale their ventures while trying to arrest rising spending and discounting.
Dunzo has made changes to its cost structure since it splurged more than Rs 100 crore per month for promotions during the Indian Premier League last year. Among other changes, it was pushing for “batching of orders” and incentivising users to go for 60-minute delivery slots.
The company also has a pickup-and-drop service for goods as well as a marketplace business to deliver groceries, medicine, meat and others. It had ventured into food delivery as well, but phased it out gradually last year.
Besides Dunzo, Y Combinator-backed Zepto is the other major standalone quick commerce player as Instamart is part of Swiggy while Blinkit and BB Now are being funded by parent firms Zomato and Tata Digital, respectively. Zepto last raised $200 million in May 2022.
Creativity in funding
Dunzo is among the latest of Indian startups to have opted for funding through convertible notes. Business-to-business ecommerce startup
Udaan had raised close to $400 million in convertible notes and debt in 2022, while
PharmEasy and others had also opted for capital via this route.
Many startups raise debt to fund daily operations. In convertible notes, it is linked to a future funding or liquidity event like an IPO where the incoming investors now will get a discount on pricing compared to others. Dunzo had taken $6 million in debt from Blacksoil in November.
At the time of the Reliance Retail investment, Dunzo’s Biswas had said the company was planning to go for an IPO by 2025.
“The debt from Blacksoil was largely a short-term capital arrangement while the ongoing round is being closed,” one of the people briefed on the matter said.
(Illustration and graphics by Rahul Awasthi)
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