
More Retail plans ₹2,000-crore IPO in 2026 to aid expansion, reduce debt
Amazon and Samara Capital-backed supermarket chain More Retail is planning to raise around ₹2,000 crore through an initial public offer (IPO), which is expected to hit the market in the calendar year 2026, a top company official said on Monday.
The proposed fund-raise plan will be mostly through fresh capital infusion, with no significant offer-for-sale component, as promoters, Samara Capital and Amazon, who hold 51% and 48% stake respectively, are unlikely to offload their shares, he said, adding that the remaining stake is held by family offices.
"We are looking at an IPO in 12–18 months, depending on valuation and market conditions. We hope to raise ₹2,000 crore, and the current promoter dilution could be about 10%," More Retail Managing Director Vinod Nambiar said.
He said the funds will be used primarily to expand the store count to 3,000 by 2030 and to make the company nearly debt-free.
The current debt stands at about ₹500 crore, consisting of loans and non-convertible debentures (NCDs), the company official said.
Both promoters have a long-term commitment to the business and pumped in ₹900 crore over the past five years in addition to the acquisition cost of ₹4,300 crore.
"More Retail raised ₹150 crore in the last 120 days from family offices to benchmark valuation," Nambiar said.
The retail chain, which is expanding aggressively, is set to cross 1,100 stores soon and aims to become EBITDA-positive with ₹60 crore profit in FY'26, he said.
The company reported a ₹65 crore EBITDA loss in FY'24, as per Ind AS accounting standards.
"It will take two years to achieve PAT-level profitability," he added.
The retailer is also deepening its partnership with Amazon Fresh. Currently, 270 of its stores serve Amazon Fresh, and this number is expected to rise to 370 by July, and further to 500–600 stores by the end of the current fiscal year, Nambiar said.
The company's offline and hybrid store count is projected to exceed 1,100 by FY'26, while the number of 'dark' outlets will also grow from the existing 40 to 100 by then.
'Dark' stores only cater to online orders.
Most of the expansion will take place in smaller towns, and during the current fiscal, Jharkhand and Odisha will be added to its footprint, Nambiar said.
More Retail currently has a strong presence in South India, West Bengal, Punjab, Haryana, and the NCR, having exited from Delhi city and Mumbai.
Meanwhile, Nambair said West Bengal is a key market and the company is the largest in West Bengal in terms of the number of stores.
The company has 109 stores in Bengal and will add 90 outlets in the next two years.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Economic Times
3 hours ago
- Economic Times
Draft data rules introduce potential for data localisation requirements: trade associations to IT ministry
The draft Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) rules introduce the potential for new data localisation needs that are inconsistent with the DPDP Act's supportive approach for data flows, trade bodies told the IT ministry in a letter last week. The draft rules were published on January 3. The final rules are yet to be notified. The Information Technology Industry Council, one of the signatories to the letter, counts Big Tech companies like Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and OpenAI as its members.'We urge the government to narrow and align these rules to bring them into alignment with the original intent of the DPDP Act,' the letter's nine signatories said. The other signatories are US India Business Council, Software and Information Industry Association, ACT | The App Association, Asia Internet Coalition, Asia Video Industry Association, Coalition of Services Industries, Computer and Communications Industry Association, and K-Internet. The industry bodies were referring to Rules 12 and 14 of the draft DPDP rules. 'This could be achieved by setting out a clear process, including timelines and safeguards, as well as adequate consultations and timelines for implementing any potential localisation requirements, and determining when and how such data localisation determinations will be made,' the associations said in their letter to The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), a copy of which was seen by ET. 'We would also urge the government to view any potential restrictions on data free flows from a future "bilateral digital trade "agreement perspective,' the signatories said. The associations also want that Rules 3-15, 21 and 22 shouldn't take effect until or after two years from the date of notification. Rule 22, as currently drafted, provides the potential for an excessively broad scope of government access to private sector data without making clear that this will follow a robust, proportionate, and transparent process with proper avenues of redress and review, they said. Giving further clarity on this process, including by referencing globally-recognised Trusted Government Access principles, would be an effective way to provide clarity and reassurance on this point, they added. The associations supported the Global Cross Border Privacy Rules (CBPR) forum and similar regimes that facilitate the free flow of data across borders, promote interoperability between privacy regimes, and encourage responsible data use and strong privacy protections, they said. Also, personal data breach reporting requires clear, risk-based reporting thresholds to ensure reporting timelines and processes do not end up compromising the efficiency of risk mitigation measures, the associations wrote in their letter dated May 21. They have also asked the MeitY to 'strongly consider' adding back language proposed in previous drafts of the DPDP Act to give critical exclusion for data pertaining to credit reporting to facilitate financial transparency and fraud prevention while supporting financial inclusion. Credit bureaus such as TransUnion CIBIL, Experian, Equifax, and CRIF High Mark are approved by the Reserve Bank of India for operating in the country.


Time of India
3 hours ago
- Time of India
Draft data rules introduce potential for data localisation requirements: trade associations to IT ministry
Live Events The draft Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) rules introduce the potential for new data localisation needs that are inconsistent with the DPDP Act's supportive approach for data flows , trade bodies told the IT ministry in a letter last draft rules were published on January 3. The final rules are yet to be Information Technology Industry Council, one of the signatories to the letter, counts Big Tech companies like Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, and OpenAI as its members.'We urge the government to narrow and align these rules to bring them into alignment with the original intent of the DPDP Act,' the letter's nine signatories said. The other signatories are US India Business Council, Software and Information Industry Association, ACT | The App Association, Asia Internet Coalition, Asia Video Industry Association, Coalition of Services Industries, Computer and Communications Industry Association, and industry bodies were referring to Rules 12 and 14 of the draft DPDP rules.'This could be achieved by setting out a clear process, including timelines and safeguards, as well as adequate consultations and timelines for implementing any potential localisation requirements, and determining when and how such data localisation determinations will be made,' the associations said in their letter to The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), a copy of which was seen by ET.'We would also urge the government to view any potential restrictions on data free flows from a future "bilateral digital trade "agreement perspective,' the signatories associations also want that Rules 3-15, 21 and 22 shouldn't take effect until or after two years from the date of 22, as currently drafted, provides the potential for an excessively broad scope of government access to private sector data without making clear that this will follow a robust, proportionate, and transparent process with proper avenues of redress and review, they further clarity on this process, including by referencing globally-recognised Trusted Government Access principles, would be an effective way to provide clarity and reassurance on this point, they associations supported the Global Cross Border Privacy Rules (CBPR) forum and similar regimes that facilitate the free flow of data across borders, promote interoperability between privacy regimes, and encourage responsible data use and strong privacy protections, they personal data breach reporting requires clear, risk-based reporting thresholds to ensure reporting timelines and processes do not end up compromising the efficiency of risk mitigation measures, the associations wrote in their letter dated May have also asked the MeitY to 'strongly consider' adding back language proposed in previous drafts of the DPDP Act to give critical exclusion for data pertaining to credit reporting to facilitate financial transparency and fraud prevention while supporting financial bureaus such as TransUnion CIBIL, Experian, Equifax, and CRIF High Mark are approved by the Reserve Bank of India for operating in the country.


Mint
3 hours ago
- Mint
HealthQuad to raise $300 million third fund amidst reorganization
HealthQuad, the early to growth stage healthcare-focused investor backed by private equity firm Quadria Capital, is looking to raise its third fund of around $300 million. This new fund comes at a time when there is a split in the general partners (GPs) that manage HealthQuad, people with knowledge of the development said. Also Read | Quadria Capital-backed Maxivision on expansion spree, eyes IPO by 2027 'The firm has refiled its papers with the markets regulator to raise the third fund. The refile shows only Sunil Thakur, Amit Varma and Abrar Mir, the founders of Quadria as the GPs of the firm," one of the persons cited above said. In 2015, when HealthQuad was set up to invest in early-stage healthcare opportunities in India, the three partners had roped in Charles-Antoine Janssen as the fourth founder and appointed him as chief investment officer. 'Now these three founders have taken back control. Janssen is parting ways to start his own fund—HealthKois," the person said. Two top executives at HealthQuad—Pinak Shrikhande and Ajay Mahipal—are also leaving with Janssen. Also Read | Quadria to invest half its India capital in climate-related healthcare solutions HealthQuad and Janssen spokespersons did not respond to emailed queries seeking comments. Mahipal, too, did not respond to messages on LinkedIn. Shrikhande could not be reached for comment. As per Janssen's LinkedIn profile, apart from being associated with HealthQuad, he cofounded KOIS s.a. with François de Borchgrave, a global impact investing firm (blended finance structuring and investment management) active in healthcare, education/skilling and living environments. He is a member of the investment committee of two other KOIS funds: Tara IV (India VC/PE healthcare and social entrepreneurship focus) and Impact Expansion (EU/PE Impact focus). Janssen is based in Belgium. 'The commercials of the first two funds will continue to remain the same. From the third fund onwards, the firm will have only three partners," the second person added. Janssen is likely to launch his firm, which will source deals in the early to growth stage in India. Though the exact strategy is not clear at this point in time. HealthQuad raised its first fund of ₹75 crore in 2016. It has yet to exhaust its second fund, which has a corpus of $162 million. Some of its portfolio companies include the Asian Institute of Nephrology and Urology (AINU), HealthifyMe, Medikabazaar, THB, Impact Guru, Ekincare and Stanplus. The reorganization at HealthQuad comes as the parent company, Quadria Capital, announced the closing of its third fund with $1.07 billion in total commitments. The oversubscribed fundraise comprises over $954 million in primary commitments and $114 million in committed co-investment capital. An additional $300 million co-investment capacity is anticipated over the course of the investment phase, bringing total committed capital to approximately $1.3 billion upon full deployment, Mint reported earlier this week.