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Wego buys Cleartrip’s Middle East business from Flipkart Group

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Wego, an online travel platform, announced that it would purchase Cleartrip’s Middle East division from Flipkart Group for an undisclosed amount. 

In addition to the sale of Flyin.com, Wego and Flipkart have agreed to collaborate on technology. 

In 2010, Cleartrip expanded into the Middle East region, and in 2018, it purchased Flyin.com, a Riyadh-based company that served a similar role in the early days of online travel in Saudi Arabia.

The regional headquarters of both Wego and Cleartrip are in Dubai.

“This acquisition will significantly increase our scale and capabilities and will strengthen our ability to partner and collaborate across our region,” said Ross Veitch, CEO and Co-Founder of Wego.

The deal is set to finalize in the second half of this year.

“Given our strategic priorities and focus on the Indian market, the acquisition of Cleartrip’s Middle East business by Wego provides continuity to its business, and we believe that they are the right partners to boost its next phase of growth,” said Ravi Iyer, Senior Vice President and Head-Corporate Development, Flipkart.

Wego is the Middle East and North Africa’s (MENA) region’s largest online travel marketplace, having been founded in 2005.

“Our focus is clear, building a world-class online travel business emanating from the Middle East but with global ambitions,” said Stuart Crighton, Co-Founder and Head of Cleartrip’s International Business.

Tata Power joins RWE to develop offshore wind projects

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RWE and Tata Power have teamed up to develop offshore wind projects in the country. Tata Power Renewable Energy Limited, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Tata Power, has signed a corresponding MoU. 

RWE and Tata Power Renewable Energy Limited will conduct technical and commercial site assessments to help India create an offshore wind industry. In addition, the firms are conducting a review of the Indian offshore wind supply chain and supporting infrastructure, including ports and grid connections, to determine the country’s strengths and future potential.

On the collaboration, Dr Praveer Sinha, CEO and Managing Director of Tata Power said, “RWE is our ideal partner to support Tata Power’s plans to enhance and grow offshore wind business based on its global expertise in running and operating offshore wind projects”.

The RWE Group, founded in Germany, has more than 120 years of experience in the energy-producing industry. Tata Power has a long and illustrious history dating back over a century. With a total capacity of 4,909 MW, the company has a strong portfolio in India’s renewables environment, with close to 1,854 MW under construction.

“India has excellent wind resources, which can help to meet the country’s increasing energy demands. If clear regulations and an effective tender scheme are in place, we expect India’s offshore wind industry will gain real momentum. RWE wants to be part of this development,” Sven Utermöhlen, CEO Wind Offshore of RWE Renewables, said.

India rises as third-best country for creative industry jobs

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According to data analyzed by Sortlist, India has risen to third place in the world for creative industry jobs, with the country best renowned for its involvement in the media and entertainment industries. 

On Sortlist, there are over 700 Indian creative agencies, with over 0.2 for every 100,000 population. Website design is the most commonly advertised service. 

On Sortlist, the average top budget of agencies in India is above €900,000 (Rs 7.6 crore), with an average team size of more than 100.

The following parameters were examined while determining the best locations for creatives: the number of live agencies in the area, the number of searches for agencies headquartered in the area, the average budget of agencies, the average team size, and the average star rating. Each factor was given a normalized score out of 10 to arrive at the final score. Each city, country, and industry received an overall score out of ten by averaging each of these scores. 

Belgium has the most creative agencies per capita of any country in the world, according to advertising industry experts, with 22.9 creative firms per 100,000 people.

The UK has only 2.4 creative agencies per 100,000 people, lagging behind European competitors such as the Netherlands (8.8), Spain (8.3), France (7.0), Switzerland (4.9), and Denmark. With only 0.7 creative companies per 100,000 individuals, the United States ranked towards the bottom, while Japan, Russia, and South Korea all scored poorly, with only 0.1 creative agencies per 100,000 people.

The United States topped the list of greatest incomes for creative professionals, with an average monthly pay of €5,495 and an average cost of living of €827. Before housing expenditures are taken into consideration, this leaves 84.95% of pay. India was absent from the list entirely. Salary information for the poll was derived from Glassdoor averages. The average monthly cost of living for a single individual in each area, excluding rent and mortgage charges, was then compared. Finland was ranked second, followed by Denmark.

According to the study, the most in-demand digital business right now is mobile app development, followed by website development and public relations. Gaming is the ninth most popular digital activity. In reality, game firms and app creators have the highest average budgets. 

Website building is the most popular service advertised on Sortlist. Website building was listed as the most prevalent digital service by nearly half of all countries.

In more than 12% of countries, advertising is the most popular creative service. 

The study also discovered that professionals with analytics, user experience (UX), and user interface (UI) skills are in high demand among tech skills.

KSUM joins with Google for startups to create worldwide connections

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Kerala Startup Mission (KSUM) has partnered with Google to link-local startups with the global startup ecosystem. 

Local startups can use Google’s programme, which includes mentorship and training for startup teams, to help scale up their ideas. Mr Paul Ravindranath, Head of Google for Startups Accelerator, India, announced the agreement at the KSUM’s ‘Huddle Global’ colloquium, which began on Saturday. 

According to an official release, the relationship will allow Kerala’s startups to join a larger network and take advantage of Google’s programme, including mentorship and startup teams training for scaled-up solutions.

In the future, areas outside of Silicon Valley are projected to have a greater impact on the global startup and technology ecosystem. While starting a business is easier than ever, access to proven processes, skilled mentors, and best practices for building businesses is still unevenly dispersed. 

Ravindranath, who is also Google’s Programme Manager (Developer Relations), explained that the company’s ground-breaking programme is all about enabling startup communities throughout the world and assisting them in leveraging one another for insights and resource sharing.

“We are excited about bringing this to startups under the KSUM umbrella. We are thrilled to expand our collaboration with KSUM and its exceptional startup portfolio,” he said. 

Commenting on the tie-up, John M Thomas, CEO, KSUM, said, “Partnering with Google for Startups will help our startups experience new technology arenas and global standard. KSUM is looking forward to imbibing the best practices from global arena that would bolster our ecosystem.” 

This year, KSUM will formalize its collaboration with Google for Startups to continue assisting India’s booming startup industry as an enabler of the state’s startup ecosystem and a catalyst for the tech ecosystem’s growth and development.

KSUM will be connected to an elite club of the world’s top accelerators through the ‘Kerala Startup Mission Google for Startups’ project, allowing it to share knowledge and leverage resources, according to the statement.

Google’s global network, insights from the company’s Silicon Valley-based startup programmes, and 20 years of Google research and best practice insights on growing businesses, products, and teams at a vast scale would also be available to the state-run agency. 

These resources will assist KSUM’s startup portfolio, which already includes some of the fastest-growing companies, in scale tremendously.

ibis Vikhroli associates with Magenta for EV charging facilities 

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ibis, a smart economy hospitality brand owned by Accor Hotels and InterGlobe Enterprises, has partnered with Magenta to install electric vehicle charging stations (EVCS) at their recently opened hotel ibis Vikhroli. The new hotel is located on Lal Bahadur Shastri Marg, a strategically significant corporate area in Mumbai, and represents the ‘Aamchi Mumbai’ culture for the new-age tourist. With the growing popularity of electric vehicles in the country, such an endeavour will help drive the expansion of the EV industry while also decreasing carbon emissions. Magenta will first construct, operate, and manage DC fast chargers at ibis Vikhroli and then additional hotels around India.

These charging solutions are mobile-enabled (OCCP-based) and include many other user-friendly features. EV drivers can utilise the ChargeGrid system to access these chargers. From purchasing a charger to completing an online charging session, the ChargeGrid app gives seamless information. 

All charging channels that will be used as part of this cooperation will be managed and administered by Charge Grid’s Magenta software, which will allow EV customers to follow the depletion of their wallet value while charging.

Sebi to impose stricter disclosure standards for new-age companies’ IPOs 

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The Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi), the market regulator, has recommended tightening disclosure criteria for new-age companies planning initial public offerings (IPOs). 

According to a discussion paper released by Sebi on Friday, such companies will be required to give more information about how they arrived at their IPO offer price. This plan attempts to cover only those businesses that do not have a three-year track record of profitability, while the standards for the rest of the industry remain unaltered. 

The news comes as the stock prices of several newly-listed technology businesses have fallen in recent months following their first public offerings.

According to Sebi’s discussion paper, the present IPO regulations only compel companies to disclose “traditional parameters” such as key accounting ratios. However, because new-age businesses are typically loss-making, the regulator felt more disclosures were necessary. 

During IPOs, the Sebi proposed that such companies disclose their key performance indicators (KPIs). Most start-ups employ statistical models such as gross merchandise value (GMV) to forecast income. Private equity and venture capital investors commonly use such KPIs to purchase holdings in unlisted start-ups.

“The issuer company shall disclose all material KPIs that have been shared with any pre-IPO investor at any point of time during the three years prior to the IPO,” said Sebi’s discussion paper adding that the companies shall also make disclosure of “Valuation of Issuer Company based on secondary sale / acquisition of shares (equity/convertible securities) excluding gifts, in the 18 months prior to the date of filing of the DRHP / RHP where either acquisition or sale is equal to or more than 5% of the fully diluted paid-up share capital of the issuer.”

To be clear, these new suggestions will only apply to enterprises that have not been profitable in the previous three years and are seeking an initial public offering.

Since mid-2021, Indian markets have seen a surge of IPOs by technology companies. Zomato, the food delivery service, was the first to go public, followed by Policy Bazaar, Paytm, and Nykaa. However, all of these firms’ stock prices have fallen since their initial public offerings, prompting market participants to complain that the IPOs were overpriced, leaving little money on the table for both IPO and post-IPO investors.

“The new-age technology companies generally remain loss making for a longer period before achieving break-even as these companies in their growth phase opt for gaining scale over profits,” Sebi said. “Investors are on boarded on these companies on the premise of future potential and accordingly the company strives for long-term market leadership rather than short-term profitability considerations.”

Sundar Pichai introduces $100 mn Google Career Certificates Fund

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Sundar Pichai, the CEO of Alphabet and Google, has announced the launch of a new $100 million Google Career Certificates Fund to train a competent workforce for high-paying, high-growth occupations in disciplines such as data analytics, IT support, project management, and user experience design. 

He stated that the goal is for ‘Social Finance’ to reach over 20,000 American workers.

“This investment in America’s future has the potential to drive $1 billion in wage gains,” Pichai said in a statement late on Thursday.

To date, about 70,000 Americans have received Google Career Certificates.

“They are available to anyone, no college degree required. Seventy-five percent of graduates report seeing a positive impact on their career within six months, including a raise or a new job,” Pichai added.

He unveiled the fund at a press conference with Alejandra Castillo, the US Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development, and the CEOs of Social Finance, Merit America, and Year Up.

“A sense of purpose and optimism is what brought me to America nearly 30 years ago. And it’s what drew me to Google and its mission to organise the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful,” said Pichai.

Google’s digital skills initiative has also aided in training 8 million Americans across all 50 states.

“We’ll invest Google capital and Google.org grants and provide our Career Certificate programme. We’ll connect students to an employer consortium of more than 150 companies who are looking to hire workers with these skills,” Pichai noted.

It’s all designed around student success, and they will receive all of this at no upfront cost, “and will only pay it back once they find a job earning at least $40,000 a year”.

Propelld collects $35mn to expand its education finance biz

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Propelld, a fintech platform focused on education, announced on Friday that it had raised $35 million in a Series B fundraising round headed by WestBridge Capital. 

Propelld, which currently employs roughly 150 people, wants to hire another 100-150 people in the next year in technology, business development, and collections. 

Propelld, founded in 2017 by the IIT Madras trio of Bibhu Prasad Das, Victor Senapaty, and Brijesh Samantaray, has over 550 educational establishments as partners and has an annual loan disbursal run rate of Rs 600 crore, according to a statement.

“With the latest capital infusion, we will strive towards building better financial products for the educational ecosystem,” said Bibhu Prasad Das, Co-founder CEO at Propelld.

Stellaris Venture Partners and India Quotient were also part of the fresh fundraising round. 

Propelld aims to extend its activities in other education categories, citing its strong position in the ed-tech, up-skilling, and job-focused markets. 

By providing personalized loan solutions, the business collaborates with educational institutions to help students afford their tuition fees.  New funds will be used to boost in-house technology and collecting skills and provide new financing solutions and expand distribution capabilities across segments, according to the company.

Ace investor Radhakishan Damani invested in Advani Hotels & Resorts

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Radhakishan Damani, a renowned investor, has added Advani Hotels & Resorts (India) Ltd to his portfolio. According to the hotel company’s exchange notification, market magnet purchased 23,93,490 shares or 5.17 per cent of the company’s total issued paid-up capital. Stock market specialists, including Radhakishan Damani, are positive on the counter. Experts predict that this hospitality stock will rise to 130 per share shortly. 

Radhakishan Damani has invested in Advani Hotels and Resorts through his investment company, Derive Investments, according to Advani Hotels and Resorts’ exchange announcement posted on the BSE website. Derive Investments has purchased 23,93,490 Advani Hotels and Resorts shares, or 5.17 per cent of the company, according to the company’s investment disclosure.

When the BSE published this information on its website, buyers’ interest in the stock spiked, hitting the upper circuit on Thursday. However, it quickly resumed trading, with profit booking erasing its early gains. Finally, this Radhakishan Damani portfolios stock closed 11.50 per cent higher on the NSE than it did on Wednesday. On the other hand, Stock market gurus believe the counter has more upward potential.

Speaking on this new Radhakishan Damani stock, Anuj Gupta, Vice President at IIFL Securities, said, “Advani Hotels and Resorts shares have strong support at ₹69 apiece levels and after sudden rise in the counter some profit-booking is expected. One should buy this stock at current levels and keep on accumulating on big dips till it is quoting above ₹69. It is expected to go up to ₹130 levels in short term. However, one must maintain stop loss at ₹69 while taking position in this Radhakishan Damani stock.”

Dealshare bags $45 million from ADIA, plans global expansion

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DealShare, a social commerce grocery startup, announced that it had received a fresh infusion of $45 million from an Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) wholly-owned subsidiary as part of a larger round. 

Tiger Global, Dragoneer Investments Group, Kora Capital, Unilever Ventures, and Alpha Wave Global are among the other investors in the $210 million round, first reported on January 28. DealShare is currently worth more than $1.7 billion. 

DealShare, founded in 2018 by Rajat Shikhar, Sankar Bora, Sourjyendu Medda, and Vineet Rao, provides daily necessities to the middle-income demographic through a community group buying strategy.

The funds will be used to improve technology, product innovation, and hiring.

“We will be utilizing the funds from our Series E round to strengthen our customer base and technology capabilities. We aim to democratize online shopping for Bharat users with unmatched service and experience by developing innovative products and tech solutions. This will be supported by building our teams across the country and hiring new tech talent at all levels.” said Rao in a prepared statement.

For demand aggregation, the ecommerce company uses the consumer-led virality paradigm of social commerce. This differs from the reseller-led approach pioneered in Meesho, which mostly operates in the clothes market. Meesho is now increasingly aiming to go direct to consumers, much like Amazon and Flipkart.

“I think we had a very different thesis to social commerce,” said Medda to ET. “We always believed social commerce will only work if it is deployed in the grocery space. For social commerce to work we need virality in the mass consumers. That will only happen when the deals are relevant to the larger population.”

“The choices in electronics and fashion are large for virality to be created,” he said. “While everyone (other social commerce players) is getting into direct commerce we are the only sizeable social commerce player in the country.”

Medda states that by employing the community-led virality model, the company has been able to keep fulfillment costs—warehousing and last-mile delivery—to 5-6% of the order cost, as opposed to 20% or more for traditional e-commerce. He also stated that acquiring a customer is $1, compared to the industry average of $10.

“These big differentiators we will continue to retain,” said Medda. “We are possibly the fastest growing ecommerce company. We are already close to a $1 billion revenue run rate now. At the same time, we burn very little. We are very close to operational profitability.”

The business has raised $393 million in total funding, including the most recent round, to compete in a crowded grocery essentials market in non-metro cities. Dealshare’s exclusive financial advisor on the deal was Avendus Capital.