Ola Electric Mobility Pvt. is in line for an initial public offering sooner than its founder previously imagined, reflecting the Indian start-up’s whirlwind pace of growth since it started selling electric scooters in late 2021.
“I thought it would take me four to six years of revenue to go public,” Founder and CEO Bhavish Aggarwal said in an interview. “Now I can feel that it will be much earlier. Ola Electric has grown and matured faster than I had initially planned because the market response has been very strong.”
The company, whose backers include SoftBank Group Corp. and Tiger Global Management, has become a leader in India’s electric-scooter market with a 38% share. It has sold more than 2,39,000 electric scooters since December 2021, according to data from the Society of Manufacturers of Electric Vehicles.
While demand initially came from first-time scooter buyers, most of Ola Electric’s customers now are already fully-fledged converts, said 37-year-old Aggarwal.
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Branching Out
Aggarwal has ambitions to expand, with plans to unveil a motorbike by the end of this year and a battery-powered car in 2024, though the timelines may change. He also continues to consider exporting scooters to Southeast Asia, Latin America and Europe, a proposition that got waylaid because demand at home was so strong, according to Aggarwal, whose first start-up, ANI Technologies Pvt., runs Ola ride-hailing operations.
Ola Cabs got as far as selecting banks for a $1 billion IPO in Mumbai, Bloomberg News reported in August 2021, but that never materialised. The company, which competes against Uber Technologies Inc., is a “profitable business for us now,” Aggarwal said in last week’s interview in Delhi. He didn’t comment on any renewed attempts to list, nor did he mention a date for a possible Ola Electric IPO.
Also read: Ola Electric will have launched 6 products by 2027: CEO Bhavish Aggarwal
Aggarwal is building a 115-acre battery factory in southern India, pitting him against billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s Reliance Industries Ltd., with the aim of making lithium-ion cells primarily for Ola Electric vehicles, as well as potentially offering energy storage and home energy solutions.
Manufacturing EV components in-house will help Ola Electric sell cars on a bigger scale and increase margins, said Aggarwal, who graduated from the Indian Institute of Technology in Mumbai. Designing vehicles from scratch will give the company more control of quality and costs in a market where most EVs are converted from gasoline models, he said.
Achieving success in electric cars won’t be easy. Combustion-engine vehicles remain the favoured mode of personal transport in India and dominate the country’s roads. EVs have been held back by the country’s lack of charging facilities and their high price tags. Nationwide sales reached 49,800 last year, just 1.3% of the 3.8 million passenger vehicles sold, according to BloombergNEF.
Bengaluru-based Ola Electric is up against more experienced manufacturers, such as market leader Tata Motors Ltd., Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. and even Elon Musk’s Tesla Inc., which is considering investing in India.
Also read: Tesla plans to roll out EVs at a starting price of ₹20 lakh in India: report
Bumps in Road
Ola Electric’s scooter business has also been affected by delivery delays due to chip shortages, and issues with quality and fire. Sales slid 39% in June from the previous month to 17,590 units, a trend that affected other automakers too after the government trimmed subsidies that were offered under its Faster Adoption and Manufacturing of (Hybrid and) Electric Vehicles program.
Still, better technology has shortened timelines for getting a product to market, according to Aggarwal. Ola Electric uses digital simulation and artificial intelligence in manufacturing to save time. “I’m building a technology-focused group of companies,” he said. “Another big technology theme of our generation will be computing and AI. So we’ll do something.”
Also read: Ola Electric hikes product prices after FAME II subsidy cuts
Being a so-called flat organisation also speeds up the production process, said Aggarwal, who is involved in daily decision-making at his business, which employs about 7,000 people.
“What would take a month in a company, we get it done in a day,” he said. “Our philosophy on execution is that we want to do things as best as possible without any compromises on quality or safety. And do it at the lowest cost possible and the fastest speed possible.
Aggarwal believes his strategy to take control of various stages of the EV supply chain will reduce costs and improve product performance and design.
“Tesla is for the West, Ola is for the rest,” he said.