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Shadowfax files IPO papers; UPI dip in June
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Logistics firm Shadowfax has become the latest new-age company to confidentially file for its IPO. This and more in today’s ETtech Top 5.Also in the letter:■ India’s unicorn check■ AI talent war rages on■ VCs’ AI flightShadowfax files confidential prospectus for its IPO (L-R), Vaibhav Khandelwal, Praharsh Chandra, Gaurav Jaithliya & Abhishek Bansal, cofounders, ShadowfaxHyperlocal logistics firm Shadowfax has filed a draft red herring prospectus (DRHP) with Sebi under the confidential route, as per a newspaper advertisement.Why it matters: The Flipkart-backed company is seeking to raise Rs 2,000-2,500 crore through its IPO, with approximately half of the funds coming from a primary share issue. By filing confidentially, Shadowfax can gauge investor appetite and tweak its offer terms without immediately putting sensitive financials into the public domain.ET reported on June 27 about Shadowfax’s plans for a confidential filing. By the numbers:FY24 operating revenue: Rs 1,885 crore (up 33% YoY)Ebitda: Rs 23 croreNet loss: Rs 12 crore (down 92% YoY)What’s next: The company plans to deploy Rs 1,000-1,100 crore from the primary proceeds to scale up its quick-commerce delivery vertical, which is gaining momentum and showing healthier margins.The big picture: Shadowfax is part of a broader wave of new-age startups gearing up to go public. Others in the queue include PhysicsWallah, Boat, Urban Company, Shiprocket, Groww, Pine Labs, and Wakefit.Also Read: What is confidential IPO filing, and why do startups choose it?UPI sees marginal dip in June transactions, value down 4% The Unified Payments Interface (UPI), operated by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), recorded a marginal dip in both transaction volume and value in June. By the numbers: UPI processed 18.40 billion transactions during the month, slightly down from 18.68 billion in May. The total value fell 4% to Rs 24.04 lakh crore from Rs 25.14 lakh crore, according to NPCI data released on July 1.What’s behind the dip? Industry executives pointed to seasonal factors. May saw a boost from high-volume events, such as the Indian Premier League, which weren’t present in June. Still, they noted that year-on-year volume growth remains strong and most expect the overall upward trend to hold.UPI also faced multiple service disruptions recently, affecting users of Google Pay, PhonePe, Paytm, and banking apps. NPCI blamed the April 12 outage on a surge in API requests from certain banks.Other channelsThe Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) processed 448 million transactions worth Rs 6.06 lakh crore, down from 464 million transactions worth Rs 6.41 lakh crore in May.Aadhaar Enabled Payment System (AePS) volumes slipped to 97 million from 105 million.FASTag transactions reached 386 million, down from 404 million.NPCI financials: NPCI reported a 41.7% jump in net profit to Rs 1,552 crore for FY25. As a not-for-profit, this is booked as a revenue surplus. Standalone revenue rose 19% to Rs 3,270 crore in FY25 from Rs 2,749 crore in FY24.Sponsor ETtech Top 5 & Morning Dispatch! Why it matters: ETtech Top 5 and Morning Dispatch are must-reads for India’s tech and business leaders, including startup founders, investors, policy makers, industry insiders and employees.The opportunity:Reach a highly engaged audience of decision-makers.Boost your brand’s visibility among the tech-savvy community.Custom sponsorship options to align with your brand’s goals.What’s next: Interested? Reach out to us at spotlightpartner@timesinternet.in to explore sponsorship opportunities.India mints only five unicorns so far; investors say 2021-style boom unlikely to return India’s startup ecosystem kicked off 2025 on a high, with fleet-management company Netradyne hitting unicorn status early in the year. But, six months in, just four others – Porter, Drools, BlueStone, and Jumbotail – have joined the club.Fall from the peak: That’s a far cry from the heady days of 2021, when India minted 45 unicorns in a single year. Most investors now view that as a one-off, fuelled by ultra-low interest rates, a post-pandemic digital surge, and aggressive global capital. That environment, they agree, isn’t coming back.Yearwise: The number of unicorns in India since 2021 is as follows:2021: 452022: 222023: 22024: 62025: 5, so farTread lightly: Following 2021, investors have become far more selective. The emphasis has moved from blitzscaling to building more sustainable businesses.Metrics like unit economics, burn rate, and gross margins now carry more weight than topline growth alone. Also Read: SoftBank-backed Netradyne, India’s first unicorn of 2025, eyes profitability by year-endInvestor take: “Fund managers are now strongly committed to thesis-driven investing and a metric-driven valuation approach. This has led to more appropriate valuations in new funding rounds. This is most visible in the slower pace of new unicorn creations in India,” Abhishek Prasad, managing partner, Cornerstone Ventures, told ET.Also Read: Dhan closes in on $200 million fundraise from ChrysCap, Alpha Wave, MUFGAI talent war: OpenAI acquihires the team behind Crossing Mind Sam Altman, CEO, OpenAI and Mark Zuckerberg, CEO, MetaThere’s a meme doing the rounds on X: “On the left is Ronaldo. Real Madrid paid $80M to sign him from Man United. On the right is Jiahui Yu. Meta paid $100M to sign him from OpenAI.” It’s funny, but it captures the serious, high-stakes race for AI talent in Silicon Valley.Driving the news: On Monday, Meta showed just how aggressive it’s getting. In a major announcement, CEO Mark Zuckerberg introduced Meta Superintelligence Labs, a new unit that will lead its AI charge. The team includes 11 top researchers poached from OpenAI, Anthropic and Google.Zuckerberg has tapped Alexandr Wang, Scale AI’s cofounder, to run the show. Bloomberg reports he’ll also serve as Meta’s c hief AI Officer.Nat Friedman, the former GitHub CEO, will work alongside Wang and lead applied research and AI products.The reorg folds Meta’s LLM teams, product groups and the FAIR unit under the new MSL umbrella.Shopping on: OpenAI, feeling the heat, has responded with an acquihire of its own.It picked up the team behind Crossing Minds, known for building AI recommendation tools for ecommerce.This follows a string of buys, including io, Windsurf, Rockset and Digital Illumination, as it doubles down on product and research talent.VCs on AI flight to valley A growing number of Indian venture capital firms are heading to San Francisco to plug into the US AI boom and catch the next big wave before it hits home.Taking flight: Elevation Capital and Peak XV Partners have established a presence in Silicon Valley. Others like Blume Ventures are making regular trips there as the region’s AI energy picks up.Elevation Capital has brought on Capillary Tech cofounder Krishna Mehra to anchor its US presence.Peak XV has opened a San Francisco office and tapped ex-Y Combinator principal Arnav Sahu to lead deals.Sources indicate that VC firm Z47 is also seeking to build out its US footprint. Insider’s take: Two Bengaluru-based investors told ET they’re flying out more often to track cutting-edge developments. “Travelling there is eye-opening in terms of what is happening in AI and the kind of talent density that is available there,” one investor said.
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