Zoomcar: Mint/Getty Images
Zoomcar Inc., an India-based car-sharing platform, has reached an agreement to go public via a merger with blank-check firm Innovative International Acquisition Corp., according to people familiar with the matter.
Zoomcar operates a marketplace for private vehicles, with owners making their cars available on the platform and users able to rent them by the hour, day, week or month. The company, whose headquarters are in Bangalore, operates in more than 50 cities in India, Indonesia, Vietnam and Egypt.
The merger with the special purpose acquisition company implies a pro forma enterprise value of about $ 456 million for the business, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the matter isn’t public.
Representatives for Zoomcar and Innovative International declined to comment.
Zoomcar was founded in 2013 by Greg Moran, who is now chief executive officer, and David Back, who is no longer with the company. The platform has more than 3 million active users, with over 25,000 vehicles registered by their owners. The company, which doesn’t own any of the vehicles rented through its platform, takes 40% of each transaction.
The company is part of a small but burgeoning cadre of companies such as San Francisco-based Turo Inc. that have extended the ride-sharing model to the vehicle itself.
Last November, Zoomcar got $ 92 million in a Series E round led by SternAegis Ventures, bringing the total it has raised to $ 332 million, according to data provider PitchBook. Sequoia Capital India is an investor and board member. Waze co-founder Uri Levine is chairman of the board.
Innovative International, which is led by Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Mohan Ananda, raised $ 230 million including so-called greenshoe shares in its initial public offering last year, according to a statement at the time.
Shares of the merged company, to be called Zoomcar Holdings Inc., are expected to trade on the Nasdaq.