Kalaari Capital has exited from their investment in Mayfield and Simplilearn. Kalaari has invested around $9 Mn over the years in the edtech startup and has received around $126 Mn as return on investment
Mayfield, which led the Series C round of $15 Mn, has received 8X return during the exit. Around $213 Mn of Blacksoil’s $250 Mn was used to buy shares from Simplilearn’s existing shareholders
Early-stage investor Kalaari Capital received almost 14X return after its exit from Bengaluru and San Francisco-based edtech startup Simplilearn. Earlier in July this year, private equity investor Blackstone acquired a majority stake of around 60% in Simplilearn for $250 Mn.
Of the total $250 Mn (approx INR 1,841 Cr) acquisition deal, over $214 Mn (INR 1,536 Cr) was utilised by Blackstone to buy shares of existing investors such as Kalaari Capital, Helion Ventures, Innoven Capital, and Mayfield, Inc42 source said. Vani Kola-led Kalaari Capital which had invested a total of around $9 Mn in the startup received $126 Mn from the exit, the source added.
Another early to mid-stage venture capital Helion Ventures has received around 10-12X returns. Mayfield, which led the Series C round of $15 Mn in Simplilearn in 2015, received about 8X return from the exit. Mayfield invested around $8 Mn in the startup, which means, it received a $64 Mn return on investment.
As per the recent regulatory filings accessed by Inc42, BCP Topco XI Pte Ltd, which is a private limited company incorporated in Singapore and is linked to private equity major Blackstone, has invested the remaining amount of the $250 Mn, that is around $36 Mn (INR 265 Cr) as a primary investment in Simplilearn.
Sources confirmed that the investment will be part of the Series D round of the startup. The regulatory filing showed that Simplilearn will be allotting a total of 41485 Series D CCPS to Blackstone.
At present, around 74% is held by Blackstone, 18% by founders/promoters and roughly 8% by the employees, reveals the company’s filing. Prior to Blackstone’s acquisition, Kalaari, Helion and Mayfield held a combined stake of 57% in Simplilearn. The investment will be utilised for growth of the startup along with market expansion.
Founded in 2010 by Krishna Kumar, Simplilearn provides online training in disciplines such as cyber security, cloud computing, project management, digital marketing, and data science, among others. It offers courses in partnership with global universities and according to its website, it has helped over 2 Mn professionals, and companies across over 150 countries get trained, acquire certifications, and upskill their employees.