Instacart co-founder Apoorva Mehta is checking out with a $1.1 billion fortune following the grocery-delivery company’s initial public offering.
(Bloomberg) — Instacart co-founder Apoorva Mehta is checking out with a $1.1 billion fortune following the grocery-delivery company’s initial public offering.
Mehta, 37, who stepped down as chief executive officer in August 2021, relinquished his board position as executive chairman as part of the IPO proceedings to current CEO Fidji Simo, a former Meta Platforms Inc. executive. The transition marks the end of Mehta’s 11-year tenure with the company he co-founded in 2012.
In the last decade, the startup has transformed from a Webvan clone to the largest grocery-delivery business in the US. Revenue grew 31% to about $1.5 billion in the six months ended June 30, powered in part by a pivot to a higher-margin advertising business.
At its peak in March 2021, following a pandemic boost, the company was valued by venture capitalists at $39 billion. Mehta’s 10% stake had already made him a billionaire with a $3.5 billion fortune at its highest point. But with viral infections dwindling and inflation accelerating, the San Francisco-based company struggled and cut its internal valuation three times last year to about $13 billion in October.
Instacart, which is incorporated as Maplebear Inc., priced its IPO Monday at $30 a share, giving it a $9.9 billion valuation. The shares jumped more than 40% when they started trading Tuesday in New York before closing at $33.70.
“What matters is how Instacart performs over the next few years, rather than what it means on day one,” Mehta said in a telephone interview after the stock began trading. “We focus more on the long-term and that’s what we’re excited about.”
Read More: Instacart Soars Up to 43% in Debut After $660 Million IPO
Mehta’s $1.1 billion fortune includes his 10% ownership of Instacart as well as a stake in his new company, Cloud Health Systems, which aims to address chronic illness. The health-tech startup, which Mehta leads as CEO, has raised $42 million from investors including Thrive Capital, Andreessen Horowitz and General Catalyst. It was valued at $200 million in a November 2022 financing round.
Mehta sold stock worth $21 million in the offering, but will remain Instacart’s largest individual shareholder, according to its amended registration filing. Venture firms Sequoia Capital and D1 Capital Partners own larger stakes, 14% and 13%, respectively, which doesn’t include any additional shares they may purchase in the IPO. Instacart’s other co-founders, Brandon Leonardo and Maxwell Mullen, each own 2%.
Webvan 2.0
Mehta started Instacart over a decade ago, getting into famed startup accelerator Y Combinator after he had missed the application deadline by two months and delivered a partner a six pack of beer to make up for it. While he was born in India and grew up in Libya, he credits his time living in a small town outside of Toronto as one of the reasons he wanted to start Instacart. He hated waiting in the cold at a bus stop with bags of groceries and believed the grocery shopping experience should have evolved by then.
Read More: Instacart IPO Puts Spotlight on Its Evolution Into Ad Seller
After studying engineering at the University of Waterloo, Mehta spent two years working on supply-chain logistics at Amazon.com Inc. before deciding to leave and build a company. He burned through 20 ideas from enterprise software to advertising startups before settling on the idea of a personal shopper. Webvan had tried online grocery delivery before, but soon became synonymous with the excesses of the dot-com era after burning through $800 million in venture funding and filing for bankruptcy.
Mehta had a knack for fundraising too, raising more than $2.8 billion over the last decade from investors including Sequoia Capital and Andreessen Horowitz, according to PitchBook. Amazon’s 2017 purchase of Whole Foods could have derailed the business, but instead it drove retailers like Costco Wholesale Corp. and Kroger Co. to align with Instacart in the delivery wars.
“It really was like a thermonuclear bomb against the entire grocery industry,” Mehta said at the time. “When we look back, that may have been a turning point for Instacart.”
Change in Fortunes
The other came when the pandemic struck in 2020 and people stuck at home were looking for ways to get everything from groceries to medicine delivered. Its volume grew to 262.6 million orders in 2022 from 171.5 million in 2020.
Instacart reached its peak in spring of 2021 when it raised new funding at a $39 billion valuation, double what it had been five months prior. But around the same time, board members started to lose confidence in Mehta’s leadership while Mehta began to question his own long-term commitment to the company, according to people with knowledge of the matter. It also explored acquisitions by both DoorDash Inc. and Uber Technologies Inc., the people said.
By July, the company announced that Simo, 37, would be taking over as CEO the next month with Mehta moving to executive chairman. A year later, Mehta decided he would step down following Instacart’s debut as a public company.
After 10 years of delivering groceries, Mehta’s new company is turning to the other side of the coin: weight loss. Cloud Health Systems’ first brand, Sunrise, is selling online weight-loss programs, including medications like Wegovy and Ozempic.
(Updates net worth in headline and first paragraph, adds Mehta’s comment in sixth.)
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