Mark Zuckerberg tries to buy payments redemption

Industry:    12 hours ago

Mark Zuckerberg is relying on a well-worn M&A playbook that has created fortunes for him before to realise the full fintech potential of WhatsApp. The global messaging ​app owned by the company he controls, Meta Platforms, has never quite lived up to the hype. Paying $900 million ‌to buy 20% of India’s CRED and bringing in its founder Kunal Shah could help. In some ways, though, the design of the deal may be too clever by half.

CRED’s mobile app rewards its 17 million users for paying their credit card bills on time. They can get cashback, points to redeem on goods and ​access to events. It’s a members-only service for those with high credit scores. The eight-year-old company also arranges loans and insurance. ​And Shah is a highly regarded entrepreneur for his success pursuing a small cohort of valuable customers when ⁠most companies in India chase low-value scale.

WhatsApp, for its part, has struggled to turn its 854 million-strong user base in India into transacting customers. ​It processes fewer than 1% of the 23 million, monthly transactions passing through India’s homegrown fast payments channel, far behind Walmart-backed PhonePe and Alphabet’s Google ​Pay, which together account for close to 80%. And the value of transactions WhatsApp processes are one-fifth the value of those CRED handles.

That makes backing CRED and making Shah CEO of WhatsApp a decent decision. At a minimum, Meta will own part of a business that says it has had its first “profitable” quarter. The California-based ​firm is also buying itself a path to a full acquisition if it wants to make one later.

Whether Shah can translate his success ​to the masses in India and WhatsApp’s other markets is uncertain, however. Nor is putting an Indian in charge likely to help Meta fight its legal ‌battles with ⁠authorities in the South Asian country over data-sharing. Plenty of global firms have Indian bosses and still run into trouble.

Part of Meta’s gamble bets on the Indian regulator’s desire to break Walmart and Alphabet’s dominance over the payments market. But the central bank also worries about U.S. Big Tech hurting competition. Though Meta won’t take a board seat and is capping its stake in CRED by paying partly in ad credits, according ​to an Economic Times report citing ​sources, there are already calls, to ⁠review the deal.

WhatsApp is, after all, buying up a competitor in a roundabout, messy way.

Context News

  • Meta Platforms will invest $900 million in CRED, valuing the Indian fintech at ​roughly $4.5 billion, the company announced on June 22. The deal also puts the startup’s founder, Kunal Shah, ​in charge of ⁠WhatsApp globally.
  • Meta will get a minority stake in the Bengaluru-based company which rewards customers for paying their credit card bills on time and will not receive access to CRED customer data.
  • CRED will receive ad credits worth an additional $100 million that can be used on Meta platforms, The Economic Times reported ⁠on June ​22, citing a person aware of the deal terms. Shah is giving up his ​board seat, while retaining a personal shareholding of less than 20% in CRED, the report added. Meta’s stake will amount to roughly 20%.
  • CRED is working on a longer-term management ​structure as the company prepares for an eventual initial public offering, TechCrunch reported on the same day.
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