Byju Founder Broke Down In Tears As Crises Engulfed The Ed-Tech Startup
NDTV
With a planned $1 billion equity fundraise from Middle Eastern investors still in limbo, Byju Raveendran broke down in tears defending his company.
In late April, Indian officials in plainclothes raided the Bengaluru offices of Byju's, seizing laptops and publicly linking the world's most valuable education-technology startup with possible foreign exchange violations.
An ocean away, Byju Raveendran, the firm's eponymous founder and chief executive, paced his condo in Dubai, downing cups of black coffee and fielding calls from top investors. With a planned $1 billion equity fundraise from Middle Eastern investors still in limbo, Raveendran broke down in tears defending his company, according to people who attended the calls.
Raveendran had been in crisis mode for months. Apart from the raid by India's financial crime-fighting agency, his once high-flying tutoring startup failed to file its financial accounts on time. Several US-based investors accused Byju's of hiding half a billion dollars, prompting lawsuits.