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India’s largest online marketplace Flipkart has seen yet another valuation markdown by one of its investors. On Tuesday, a Morgan Stanley managed mutual fund marked down the value of its holding in Flipkart by 38.2 percent to $52.13 a share, down from $84.29 a share in the June quarter, according to the fund’s filings with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
The mutual fund, Morgan Stanley Select Dimensions Investment Series, currently holds 1,969 shares in Flipkart that are collectively valued at $1,02,644.
The company’s valuation when it last raised capital in July was $15.2 billion.
This also marks the fourth valuation markdown in the last nine months and the largest by Morgan Stanley to date. In the last markdown in June this year, the fund had cut Flipkart’s valuation by 4.1 percent, pegging it at $9 billion. In May, it slashed the value of its stake by 15.5 percent. The second highest markdown so far came in February when Morgan Stanley slashed the value of its Flipkart shares by 23.4 percent to $87.9 per share as of 31 March, from $103.97 per share as of 31 December 2015.
It is not just Morgan Stanley that has marked down the valuation of India’s most valuable e-commerce company. Earlier this month, two other investors in Flipkart – Fidelity Rutland Square Trust II and Valic Co – lowered the value of shares they own by 3.2 percent and 11.3 percent respectively for the quarter-ended August.
The latest markdown comes at a time when Flipkart is reportedly in talks to raise fresh funds.
American asset management firm T Rowe Price has slashed the e-commerce company’s valuation twice in the past whereas Vanguard Group, Fidelity Rutland Square Trust II, and Valic Co have each lowered the value of their shares once before.
Other investors in Flipkart include Tiger Global Management, Naspers, Accel Partners, Iconiq Capital, and DST Global.
2016 has been a tough year for India’s consumer internet companies. Firms are struggling to raise capital at existing valuations and have suffered multiple markdowns in their valuations.
In September, SoftBank marked down the value of its two Indian investments, e-commerce marketplace Snapdeal and cab-hailing firm Ola.
Markdowns are very much in the nature of the business, said Ben Mathias, managing director of Vertex Ventures in a telephonic interview. Vertex Ventures is the venture capital arm of Singapore state investment firm Temasek Holdings.
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(This article was first published on BloombergQuint)
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