In a major move to solidify its balance sheet before a highly anticipated public debut, Flipkart is exploring a pre-IPO funding round to raise $2 billion to $2.5 billion.
Reports from earlier today, April 16, 2026, confirm that Flipkart Group CEO Kalyan Krishnamurthy has personally been leading a global roadshow, meeting with top-tier sovereign wealth funds and private equity firms across Singapore, London, and the U.S. to gauge appetite for the private raise.
1. The Strategic Objective: Benchmark Before Listing
The primary goal of this $2.5 billion round is to set a “valuation benchmark.”
- Target Valuation: Flipkart is reportedly seeking a valuation in the $45 billion to $50 billion range for this private round, which would serve as a launchpad for a projected $60 billion to $70 billion IPO valuation in 2027.
- The Walmart Factor: The deal’s success hinges on Walmart, which currently owns roughly 85% of the company. Walmart is currently evaluating whether to dilute its stake further to bring in new strategic partners or to keep the cap table “tight” before the public offering.
- Liquidity Boost: The funds are earmarked for aggressive expansion into “Minutes” (its 10-minute quick commerce service) and a new food delivery pilot launching in Bengaluru this May.
2. Timeline: The Road to Mumbai
Flipkart has successfully completed its “reverse flip”—shifting its legal domicile from Singapore back to India—a critical step for a domestic listing.
| Milestone | Expected Timeline | Status |
| Pre-IPO Funding Round | Q2 – Q3 2026 | In Active Talks |
| Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) | Late 2026 | Internal Prep |
| IPO Listing (Mumbai) | Before March 2027 | Target Goal |
3. Financial Snapshot (FY26 Performance)
Despite the massive scale, Flipkart has significantly narrowed its losses as it shifts focus from “growth at all costs” to “sustainable profitability.”
- Revenue Growth: Operations grew 14.4% to ₹20,493 crore in the latest reported quarter, driven heavily by a 10% surge in ad income.
- Loss Reduction: Net losses narrowed by 37% to ₹1,494 crore, signaling that the company’s tech-driven efficiencies (like the AI-transformation charter led by Hemant Badri) are finally paying off.
- Operating Income: Adjusted operating income rose 26.5% YoY to $1.8 billion (across Walmart’s international segment), giving investors confidence that the “path to profit” is clear.
4. Why This Matters for You
- The “Exit” Signal: This round could provide an exit window for early-stage investors (like the remaining stakes from the $12.1 billion raised over the years) before the lock-in periods of a public listing.
- FPI Recovery: If Flipkart successfully raises $2.5 billion from global investors, it could act as a “sentiment floor” for the $18.84B FPI sell-off we discussed, proving that long-term “India Tech” is still a primary target for global capital.
- Quick Commerce War: The capital will likely be deployed to fight Blinkit and Swiggy Instamart directly, potentially triggering a fresh “discount war” in the urban markets you track.
