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Decoding Ola Electric’s RHP fine print and FY24 numbers

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Decoding Ola Electric’s RHP fine print and FY24 numbers
Medial

Electric mobility company Ola Electric received approval from SEBI for its IPO and filed the red herring prospectus (RHP) on July 26. The company aims to raise Rs 6,146 crore ($740 million) which includes a fresh issue of Rs 5,500 crore ($662.7 million) and an offer for sale of up to 84,941,997 shares amounting to Rs 646 crore ($77.8 million) considering upper limit (Rs 76) of the price band. The company has set a price of Rs 72 to 76 per share. Ola Electric’s IPO will be open on August 2 for retail investors and their anchor book for its initial public offering (IPO) will open on August 1, 2024. The closing date of the IPO is August 6, 2024. It has appointed Kotak, BOFA Securities, Axis Capital, SBI Capital, CITI, Golaman Sachs, ICICI and BOB Capital as their lead managers. Entrackr has reviewed Ola Electric’s DRHP to decode its IPO blueprint. Ola Electric’s current captable According to the revised DRHP, Bhavish Aggarwal is the largest stakeholder in Ola Electric with 36.94% followed by SoftBank which holds 21.98%. Tiger Global commands 6.03% while Alpha Wave and Matrix Partners (now Z47) hold 3.49% and 3.43%, respectively. At the same time, Ola Electric’s employee stock options (ESOPs) pool stood at 7.67% of the total share capital. Who is selling in the IPO? Apart from Hyundai Motor and ANI Technologies (Ola Cabs), every major stakeholder is participating in Ola Electric’s offer for sale. During the sale of 84.9 million shares, Aggarwal is offloading 37.91 million shares amounting to Rs 288.2 crore at Rs 76 per share (upper limit of the price band), representing 2.78% of his total shareholding in Ola Electric. SoftBank will dilute its stake by 2.68% with 1.48x returns, and Tiger Global will sell 1.99% of its holding marking 6.5x gains. Alpha Wave and Temasek will sell 2.68% and 0.16% of their holdings with 1.22x and 1.01x returns, respectively. As an early backer of Ola Electric, Matrix Partners first invested in 2018, allowing them to benefit from a lower average cost of acquisition at Rs 8.22 per share. In contrast, Tiger Global’s average cost of acquisition was Rs 11.70 per share, and SoftBank invested at Rs 51.37 per share. Importantly, based on the price band of Rs 72-76 that will be available to the public, the investors above will realize specific returns from Ola Electric. Where will the IPO proceeds be utilized? According to the DRHP, out of the Rs 5,500 crore in fresh funds, Rs 1,227.6 crore will be allocated to capital expenditure, Rs 800 crore to debt payment, and Rs 1,600 crore for research and development. Ola Electric will also invest Rs 350 crore in organic growth initiatives, with the remaining amount will be used for general corporate purposes. Financial standing as of FY24 Ola Electric has shown strong growth over the past two fiscal years, with revenue increasing 13.4 times from Rs 373 crore in FY22 to Rs 5,010 crore in FY24, solely driven by sales of electric scooters. The hyper-growth has come at an efficient cost as its losses rose only 7.6% to Rs 1,584 crore in the last fiscal year (FY24) from Rs 1,472 crore in FY23. Where did Ola Electric spend the most during FY24? The SoftBank-backed firm allocated approximately 70% of its expenses to the cost of materials. Among these costs, cells comprised 32.7%, and power electronics accounted for 14.79%. Motors and other components collectively made up the remaining expense. Notably, out of the total cost of materials, Ola Electric imported 36.86% alone from China ( Rs 1,618 crore) in the form of lithium-ion cells, magnets, amplifiers, and electronic integrated circuits. Revenue breakdown by scooter model and units sold Ola Electric offers its scooter in five variants: Ola S1 Pro (Gen1), Ola S1 Pro (Gen2), Ola S1, Ola S1 Air, and Ola S1X. The company sold 3,29,618 scooters in FY24 which is more than 2X as compared to FY23. Ola S1 pro (Gen1 and Gen2) cumulatively generated 59.62% of the total revenue while Ola S1 Air and Ola S1 X+ added 18.93% and 10.66% of revenue to the company’s coffers. Importantly, the cancellation rate as a percentage of fully paid and confirmed orders rose to 9.14% in FY24, up from 7.69% in FY23. Ola electric has a gross margin of 12.58% while TVS Motos, Eicher Motors, Bajaj Motors and Hero MotoCorp have gross margins 37.65%, 45.69%, 28.92% and 32.49%, respectively.

Why EV maker Ather’s IPO didn’t tick all right boxes

EntrackrEntrackr · 3m ago
Why EV maker Ather’s IPO didn’t tick all right boxes
Medial

Why EV maker Ather’s IPO didn’t tick all right boxes Ather had to scale down its expected valuation from $2 billion to $1.4 billion ahead of the IPO — a move that, to some investors, signaled weaker demand or a lack of confidence. Ather Energy’s Rs 2,626 crore IPO — India’s third-largest public offering of 2025 so far — had all the makings of a headline event: a respected EV brand, strong engineering pedigree, and a fast-growing electric scooter market. Yet, as the subscription window closed, the response appeared muted. Institutional investors subscribed to just 1.7 times the shares allocated for Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIB) category, while Non-Institutional Investors (NIIs) subscribed to only 66% of their quota. Retail investors showed comparatively more interest, with a subscription rate of 1.78 times, thanks possibly to some last minute pushing by brokerages promising the possibility of listing gains. Ather is known for its solid engineering and high-quality scooters. But when it came to the IPO, it struggled to get attention. Many investors felt the company didn’t share a big, bold vision — something Ola did well. Ather had to scale down its expected valuation from $2 billion to $1.4 billion ahead of the IPO — a move that, to some investors, signaled weaker demand or a lack of confidence, especially when compared to the bolder positioning of rivals like Ola Electric. Even when we look at the financials of both EV companies, the contrast is clear. Ahead of its IPO, Ola Electric disclosed in its Red Herring Prospectus (RHP) that it recorded Rs 5,000 crore in revenue for FY24, with a net loss of Rs 1,584 crore — meaning the company spent Rs 1.25 to earn every Rs 1 in revenue. Ather Energy, on the other hand, reported Rs 1,579 crore in revenue with a loss of Rs 580 crore for the first nine months of FY25, translating to a cost of Rs 1.36 to earn every Rs 1. That higher per-unit cost, combined with lower scale, may have made investors cautious, especially when comparing Ather’s path to profitability with Ola’s stronger topline growth. Ather’s slow and steady approach to expansion, which ensured high customer loyalty and trust, has boomeranged when it comes to the IPO. Public markets tend to reward speed, growth, or profitability, and in Ather’s case, it appears lucky to have scraped through with none of the above. That is a huge endorsement of its reputation and promise, and possibly positive word of mouth. That the IPO was practically a compulsion is also a reason why the firm decided to forge ahead, with limited runway available and backers holding off. There is every possibility that investors will have to be more patient than usual to see the firm deliver returns. The founders have almost been timid in making claims linked to prospects, the antithesis of what Bhavish Aggarwal of Ola Electric. One can only hope that this refusal to chest thump will deliver the kind of returns that gladden the heart in time.

Z47 stake in Ola Electric falls below 2% after recent partial exit

EntrackrEntrackr · 1d ago
Z47 stake in Ola Electric falls below 2% after recent partial exit
Medial

Z47 stake in Ola Electric falls below 2% after recent partial exit Ola Electric’s early backers, Z47 (formerly Matrix Partners India) and Tiger Global Management, have trimmed their stakes in the Bengaluru-based company during the April–June 2025 quarter, as per stock exchange disclosures filed for the period. Z47 reduced its holding from 2.72% to 1.93%, a cut of approximately 0.81 percentage points. Based on an average share price of Rs 41, the VC firm is estimated to have earned around Rs 147–150 crore from the sale. Tiger Global also marginally reduced its stake from 3.45% to 3.24%, with an estimated Rs 39–45 crore. Its remaining stake, held via Internet Fund III, is currently valued at Rs 587 crore. The reduction in its stake in Ola Electric comes as Z47 actively explores secondary stake sales in other portfolio companies, including OfBusiness, Razorpay, and Dailyhunt’s parent VerSe. Despite the partial exits, both Z47 and Tiger Global remain on Ola Electric’s cap table with meaningful minority stakes. SoftBank, AlphaWave, Temasek, and Citigroup are some notable investors in the EV firm. Ola Electric’s revenue continues its downward spiral with yet another sharp drop in the latest quarter. Its revenue from operations decreased by 49.6% to Rs 824 crore in Q1 FY26, compared to Rs 1,644 crore in Q1 FY25. Its grew 23.3% year-on-year to Rs 428 crore during the same period. The company is currently trading at Rs 40.7 per share (as on 02 PM) with a total market capitalization of Rs 17,925 crore ($2.1 billion). Ola Electric also slipped to the third spot in July with 17,848 registrations, down 57% YoY, as its market share fell to 17.35%. Meanwhile, Ather Energy narrowed the gap with 16,231 units and a 15.78% share. The dip adds to Ola Electric’s mounting challenges as rivals like TVS and Bajaj consolidate their positions at the top.

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