
Adobe predicts AI-assisted shopping will grow 520% during the 2025 U.S. holiday season, with total online sales expected to hit $253.4 billion.
Walmart-owned e-commerce giant Flipkart advances regulatory approvals to relocate headquarters from Singapore to India, targeting completion by year-end as it prepares for a 2026 domestic IPO. The $36 billion startup joins a growing trend of Indian companies redomiciling to tap expanding local capital markets.

Flipkart has secured in-principle approval from a Singapore court and completed several hearings at India's National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) for its headquarters relocation. The process, initiated over two months ago following board approval in April, targets completion within the next couple of months to align with India's critical festive season sales period. This timeline positions Flipkart to meet requirements for a domestic stock listing expected as early as 2026.
The relocation helps companies align with evolving local regulations and meet requirements for domestic stock listings while tapping India's expanding retail investor base and rising IPO appetite. Flipkart's $36 billion valuation makes it the most valuable startup to undertake this redomiciling process, following similar moves by PhonePe (which filed confidential IPO papers this week targeting ₹120 billion), Zepto, and Groww.
The move reflects the growing maturity and attractiveness of India's capital markets compared to overseas alternatives. Groww is set to become the first Indian startup to list domestically after redomiciling from the U.S., with its IPO expected later this year. This trend indicates startups' increasing confidence in India's public markets and regulatory environment for supporting high-growth technology companies.

Adobe predicts AI-assisted shopping will grow 520% during the 2025 U.S. holiday season, with total online sales expected to hit $253.4 billion.