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Swiggy to Invest Rs 1,000 Crore in subsidiary Scootsy Logistics

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MUMBAI: : Swiggy’s board has approved an investment of up to Rs 1,000 crore in its wholly owned subsidiary, Scootsy Logistics, through a rights issue. The investment will be made in multiple tranches and is aimed at strengthening working capital and funding expansion initiatives.

Scootsy Logistics specialises in supply chain services, including warehouse management, in-warehouse processing, and efficient order fulfilment for wholesalers and retailers. The company plays a critical role in streamlining logistics and ensuring seamless deliveries across India. The transaction qualifies as a related party deal but is conducted at arm’s length, with Swiggy maintaining its existing shareholding without further financial interest beyond this investment.

Scootsy did a turnover of Rs 57,957 million in FY 2024; Rs 36,862 million in FY 2023 and Rs 15,803 million in FY 2022.

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Shares under the rights issue will be issued at Rs 7,640 each, including a Rs 7,630 premium, or at a price determined through valuation.

Established in 2014, Scootsy has been a key logistics partner in India’s fast-growing e-commerce sector, offering scalable and efficient logistics solutions. Swiggy’s investment underscores its commitment to bolstering supply chain infrastructure, enhancing operational efficiency, and supporting future growth in the evolving digital commerce landscape.

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e-commerce

Amazon unveils first Trustworthy Shopping Experience Report

32,000 bad actors targeted, 15 million fake products removed in 2025.

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MUMBAI: In a marketplace where trust is the real currency, Amazon is showing its receipts. Amazon has released its first-ever Trustworthy Shopping Experience Report, offering a detailed look at how it polices its vast digital shelves from counterfeit crackdowns to scam detection and review authenticity. At the heart of the report is a four-pronged strategy, proactive controls, risk anticipation, enforcement against bad actors, and consumer protection. The scale is staggering. Since 2020, Amazon’s Counterfeit Crimes Unit has pursued over 32,000 bad actors globally through litigation and criminal referrals spanning 14 countries.

The clean-up drive accelerated in 2025, with the company identifying and disposing of more than 15 million counterfeit products worldwide. Legal action also led to the takedown of over 100 websites linked to fake reviews and scams, an ongoing battle in the age of algorithmic manipulation.

Behind the scenes, artificial intelligence and machine learning are doing the heavy lifting. Amazon says it monitors billions of daily interactions across listings, reviews, and seller activity to spot trouble before it surfaces. Its predictive systems can even flag potentially infringing listings for trending products before brands raise the alarm.

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Tools like Omniscan, which verifies product safety information at scale, and SENTRIX, designed to detect and eliminate phishing websites, are part of this expanding tech arsenal. Together, they aim to reduce risk while keeping the platform usable for legitimate sellers.

That balance between protection and friction is a tightrope Amazon acknowledges. Rohan Oommen, Vice President of Worldwide Customer and Partner Trust, noted that while safeguards are critical, they must not stifle genuine businesses. Features like the Account Health Dashboard are meant to give sellers clearer visibility into compliance and performance.

Consumer-facing measures are also getting sharper. From direct safety alerts to recall notifications and refund guidance, Amazon is leaning into transparency, backed by partnerships with consumer organisations to raise awareness.

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The report’s release follows the expansion of Amazon’s Counterfeit Crimes Unit into India, signalling a deeper push into one of its fastest-growing markets, with closer coordination planned between brands, sellers, and law enforcement.

In short, as online shopping grows more complex, Amazon is betting that trust built through data, enforcement, and a fair bit of algorithmic vigilance will be its most valuable product yet.

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