The talks for a deal with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) are at a very early stage and could fall apart as no plans have been finalized yet, said the people, who declined to be named as the information is confidential.
“We have been clear that we support an IPO for Flipkart, but we have not made any decisions on timing, listing venue or methodology,” a spokesman for Walmart told Reuters.
Walmart acquired a roughly 77% stake in Flipkart for about $16 billion in 2018 and said later that year that it could take the company public in four years.
A growing number of Indian startups are considering the SPAC route to public markets as it involves less regulatory scrutiny and gives companies more certainty over the valuation that will be attained and the funds that will be raised.
India’s largest renewable energy firm ReNew Power last month struck a deal with a blank-check company to go public in the United States, while SoftBank-backed online grocery startup Grofers has also held talks with SPACs.
At least a dozen more Indian tech and internet startups are expected to choose that route to the public markets over the next 6-12 months, investment bankers have told Reuters.
Reuters first reported in September that…