Paytm’s $2.5 bln IPO mints new millionaires in India

NEW DELHI, Nov 12 (Reuters) – Indian electronics engineer Siddharth Pandey will become a millionaire after the country’s biggest ever public issue, but he says he had to overcome his father’s opposition to join fintech firm Paytm when it was a fledgling start-up nine years ago.

About 350 current and ex-employees will each have a net worth of at least 10 million Indian rupees ($134,401.38) after Paytm’s $2.5 billion IPO, a source in the company told Reuters. Many, like Pandey, will become dollar millionaires when the company lists next week.

Those rewards are huge in a country where the per capita income is below $2,000.

Pandey, now 39, is no longer with the company and is working at another start-up that he declined to identify. But he says his seven-year stint at Paytm left him with tens of thousands of shares.

He declined to give details, but the shares were priced at 2,150 rupees ($28.9) apiece on Friday. read more Pandey said he would be worth more than $1 million.

“My dad was very demotivating. He said, ‘What is this Paytime?!’,” Pandey told Reuters, referring to the time he joined Paytm in 2013.

“‘For once work in a company people know about,’ my father said.”

“Now he (my father) is obviously very happy. He has just asked me to stay grounded,” said Pandey, who is from Uttar Pradesh, the country’s most populous state and one of its poorest.

When Pandey joined Paytm it was primarily a small payments company with fewer than 1,000 staff. Today the firm has more than 10,000 employees and offers a range of services from banking, shopping, movie and travel ticketing to gaming.

To celebrate, Pandey says he took his father on a five-day luxury trip to Udaipur, a popular tourist destination in the desert state of Rajasthan in September, spending roughly 400,000 rupees ($5,376).

“Paytm has always been a generous paymaster. Vijay (Sharma, the Paytm founder) has always wanted that people make money, they move up in life,” Pandey said.

Married and with two children, he says that the windfall will allow him to work in startups where he is not entirely focused on his income or even help him get back into academics.

“Part of the money goes into my retirement fund and I will use a large part of it for my kids’ education,” he said. ($1=74.40 Indian rupees)Reporting by Aftab Ahmed and Sankalp Phartiyal: Editing by Alasdair Pal and Raju Gopalakrishnan

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Recent Posts

Dubai Emerges as a New Listing Hub as Yuan Bonds Gain Ground in the Middle East

Dubai is steadily positioning itself as a preferred destination for debt and equity listings as…

1 week ago

DUBAI REAL ESTATE SHOWS STRENGTH AS DEVELOPERS DRIVE SALES ACROSS LUXURY AND AFFORDABLE SECTORS

Emaar maintains market leading position while Binghatti rises as city’s top developer in total sales volume…

1 week ago

IMF Executive Board Completes the Fourth Review under the Extended Credit Facility Arrangement for Ethiopia

The IMF Executive Board completed the fourth review of the arrangement under the Extended Credit…

1 week ago

Nisus Finance Bets Big on Dubai Residential Market with ₹536 Crore Motor City Acquisition

Nisus Finance Services Company Limited (NiFCO) has made its largest property investment in the United…

1 week ago

Gulf Markets Slide as Saudi-UAE Tensions over Yemen Rattle Investors

Gulf equity markets ended mostly lower as renewed Saudi-UAE tensions over Yemen rattled investor confidence

2 weeks ago

RELEASE OF THE JANUARY 2026 WORLD ECONOMIC OUTLOOK UPDATE

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) will release the January 2026 World Economic Outlook (WEO) Update…

2 weeks ago