A deal is set to be announced as early as next week, the
sources added.
ShareChat's parent company, Mohalla Tech, did not respond to
a request for comment. Google and Temasek did not immediately respond to
requests for comment, while Reuters could not immediately reach the Times
Group.
This is Google's second key investment in India's short
video space, having previously backed Josh, which competes with ShareChat's
sister firm Moj.
Google's investment in a bearish market for Indian start-ups
shows the appetite for the short video sector and the start-up's investment
thesis, one of the sources said. India's tech startups, which raised a record
$35 billion in new funds in 2021, have been struggling to raise funds as
corporate governance concerns loom large for investors facing a new uncertainty
in global markets.
Short video apps like Moj and Josh shot up in popularity
after India in 2020 banned ByteDance's TikTok and some other Chinese apps
following a border clash with China.
ShareChat currently has 180 million monthly active users.
Moj, along with Mohalla's recently acquired MX TakaTak, has a combined user
base of 300 million, according to one of the sources.
ShareChat was last valued at $3.7 billion in a $266 million
funding round from investors including Alkeon Capital and Temasek. The firm
also counts Twitter and Snap among its investors.
If the bid by Tesla CEO Elon Musk to buy Twitter goes
through, Musk will have potentially a stake of between 6 percent and 8 percent
in ShareChat, the source added. © Reuters