India's No.
3 e-commerce player Snapdeal has rejected an initial takeover offer from its
larger rival Flipkart this week, but the talks between the two camps that have
been
attempting to forge a deal for months continue, said two sources close to
the matter.
Flipkart's
initial bid for Snapdeal came in below the widely anticipated $1 billion
valuation, said one of the sources.
The Mint
newspaper in India, citing unnamed sources, said on Tuesday that Flipkart's bid
was worth $700-$800 million, while rival publication Economic Times said the
bid had come in between $800-$900 million.
Snapdeal,
which is operated by Jasper Infotech, opened its books to Flipkart in May for
the company to run a due diligence process on it. Japan's SoftBank, Snapdeal's
biggest investor, is keen to fold the e-commerce firm into Flipkart as it plans
to invest in the larger player at the same time and sell Snapdeal in an all
equity deal, giving itself a sizeable stake in India's biggest e-commerce firm.
"The
due diligence came up all clean," said one of the two sources, adding that
the low-ball offer put forward was hence inexplicable and therefore rejected.
"I
think it's basically just negotiation," said the source.
Flipkart's
offer, made before a July 2 deadline during which sale talks were exclusive
between the two companies, is not the end of negotiations, the source said.
The second
source also said that talks would continue and added a deal is expected to be
finalized by mid-July.
Flipkart,
Snapdeal and its key investors did not immediately respond to requests for
comment.
Flipkart has
not currently bid for Snapdeal's logistics arm Vulcan Express and its digital
payments venture FreeCharge, said the first source, adding that these assets
may be sold separately.
SoftBank is
expected to invest about $1 billion in Flipkart through a fresh cash infusion
and by buying equity stakes from its investors Tiger Global and Naspers, sources
have previously told Reuters.
The deal is
likely to help Flipkart, which is already backed by Microsoft Corp, China's
Tencent and online auction site eBay, to stay ahead of Amazon in the world's
fastest-growing internet services market.
Reuters
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