FirstCry, India’s biggest e-commerce platform for mother and baby products, is aiming to raise $218 million through the sale of new shares in its initial public offering, almost a third of the $700 million it had originally targeted.
Brainbees Solutions, the parent firm of online baby product marketplace FirstCry, wrote in a draft prospectus filed with the local market regulator that some investors including SoftBank, NewQuest and TPG plan to sell some shares as part of the IPO.
The startup is eyeing a valuation of about $4 billion, down from its previous $6 billion target last year, according to a person familiar with the matter. FirstCry said it hadn’t set the price in its draft prospectus. The book-running lead managers appointed for the IPO include Kotak Mahindra Capital, Morgan Stanley, BofA Securities India and JM Financial.
Founded in 2010, FirstCry plans to use the IPO proceeds toward expenditure for setting up new stores and warehouses, sales and marketing initiatives, investments in overseas and domestic expansion, technology costs and inorganic growth through acquisitions. FirstCry offers more than 1 million SKUs from over 6,800 brands. This includes major third-party Indian and international brands as well as FirstCry’s own home brands such as BabyHug, Babyoye and others.
Details of FirstCry’s shareholders, holding at least 1%, as of Thursday. (Disclosure: FirstCry DRHP)
Details of FirstCry’s shareholders, holding at least 1%, as of Thursday. (Disclosure: FirstCry DRHP)
The startup also operates 180 pre-schools under the brand FirstCry Intellitots across India. Brainbees has also expanded overseas by launching FirstCry online platforms in UAE and Saudi Arabia. It also acquired a majority stake in GlobalBees in 2021.
FirstCry reported more than doubling its total income to $688.4 million in the financial year ending March 2023, up from $302 million from the same period a year ago. In the financial year ending March this year, its losses had ballooned to $58.3 million, from $9.4 million from a year ago.
Source @TechCrunch