China's Ant Financial raises $10 billion at $150 billion valuation - sources

Reuters  |  HONG KONG 

By Kane Wu

Ant's first fundraising targeting global money values the firm at $150 billion, the people said, compared with about $60 billion after its previous fundraising in April 2016.

A number of global sovereign wealth funds and firms joined the fundraising as main investors. They include Singapore's sovereign fund and state investor Temasek Holdings (Private) Ltd, as well as U.S. firm Warburg Pincus LLC, the people said.

Malaysian sovereign fund has also joined as a major investor, one of the people said.

The funding round also brought in firm and firm Sequoia Capital, which typically invests in early-stage start-ups, three of the people said.

The amount and investor line-up are finalised and the transfer of funds is underway, the people said.

The funding round includes a separate tranche of around 7 billion yuan ($1.1 billion) in new shares which has not been finalised, two of the people said.

The people spoke to on condition they not be identified as the deal details are not yet public.

Ant, controlled by founder Jack Ma, declined to comment. Carlyle, Temasek and Warburg declined to comment. Khanazah, GIC and did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The capital-raising comes ahead of a widely expected initial public offering (IPO), though has neither publicly set a timetable nor chosen a likely stock exchange.

A $150 billion valuation would make Ant's IPO one of the biggest ever - comparing to the $104 billion of six years ago and Alibaba's $168 billion in 2014.

A fundraising document seen by showed planned to list both in and Hong Kong in 2019, and its investors joining the latest fundraising could expect to exit within one to three years. Ant declined to comment on the document.

Strong demand from investors looking to position themselves ahead of Ant's potential IPO has resulted in a much higher amount than an initial target of up to $5 billion, which Reuters earlier reported.

Four-year-old Ant, which was spun off from Alibaba when the group went public in New York, has diversified over the years into credit services, and online banking, besides owning the payment platform.

After becoming a dominant in payments in China, the company has also invested in a number of including Chinese bike-sharing company Ofo, delivery app operator Ele.me and Indian payment company

The firm counts China's sovereign wealth fund, Investment Corp, Construction Bank Corp, the country's and big state insurers, among others, as investors from previous funding rounds.

($1 = 6.3971 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Kane Wu; Additional reporting by Julie Zhu and Liz Lee; Writing by Sumeet Chatterjee; Editing by Christopher Cushing)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, May 29 2018. 12:25 IST