Oyo Hotels is in a hurry for an initial public offering (IPO) as creditors insist that founder Ritesh Agarwal pay off the dues for US$383 million (RM1.71 billion) he borrowed if the startup doesn’t have an IPO by October.
(March 4): India’s Oyo Hotels is speeding up plans for an initial public offering (IPO), as an important year-end debt repayment deadline approaches.
Creditors, including Mizuho Financial Group Inc, insist that founder Ritesh Agarwal pay off the dues for US$383 million (RM1.71 billion) he borrowed — part of a multibillion-dollar loan package — if the startup doesn’t have an IPO by October, people familiar with the matter said. Lenders want clear visibility on Agarwal’s liquidity and will potentially allow him to delay the repayment until 2027 only if Oyo lists this year, they said, asking not to be named as the matter is private.
Agarwal, 31, borrowed US$2.2 billion in 2019, with a guarantee from backer SoftBank Group Corp’s boss Masayoshi Son, to increase his stake in Oyo and gain more strategic control over a company he built in his teens. That loan was restructured in 2022, and Agarwal is yet to pay back its first tranche, the people said.oyo
Oyo, once one of SoftBank’s most prominent investees, has explored a stock-market debut for years — until Covid-19 wiped out once-stellar growth. The startup has now begun discussions with bankers for an IPO valuing the firm at as much as US$5 billion, the people said. SoftBank is its largest shareholder with a stake of more than 40%. Agarwal, whose previous plans to list Oyo floundered, owns more than 30%.
Agarwal’s family office, when asked for a comment, said Oyo’s IPO plan “whenever it’s decided would consider its strong net profits” for the year through March 2024 and “expected strong year” ending March 2025.
“A lot of the information regarding the financing arrangement and the so-called restructuring is completely incorrect and just speculation or rumour-mongering,” it said. “The speculated valuation is also separated from reality and lower than the secondary transactions that we are aware of.”
A SoftBank representative also said in an emailed statement Bloomberg’s report on the IPO was “based on incorrect information.” Mizuho representatives didn’t respond to a request for comment.
Agarwal founded Oyo, India’s answer to Airbnb Inc, in 2013 after dropping out of college. He soon won the backing of SoftBank’s Son, who mentored the young entrepreneur and urged him to rapidly expand in markets like Japan and the US — with disastrous consequences. The Covid-19 pandemic also hammered Oyo’s business that rests on cheap hotels for price-sensitive customers. The upstart’s troubles — including its losses on aggressive overseas expansion and legal disputes — epitomise India’s venture-funding-fuelled boom that fizzled as investors turned their focus on profitability.
Oyo has made a gradual recovery after coronavirus infections subsided and the world opened up — it eked out a small profit for the fiscal year through March 2024 as sales recovered.
Late last year, Agarwal infused about 8.3 billion rupees (RM424.02 million) in the company through his Singapore-based investment firm.
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