According to scanx.trade, FIT 3PL Warehousing Private Limited — a wholly owned subsidiary of TVS Supply Chain Solutions Limited — has invested ₹59.56 crore (₹59,56,43,370) in Swamy & Sons 3PL Private Limited. The transaction secures an 80% stake in the target’s paid-up share capital and is structured in two tranches, with the secondary acquisition scheduled for completion by September 30, 2027.
Transaction Structure and Capital Allocation
The ₹59.56 crore investment comprises both primary capital infusion and secondary share purchase. Specifically, FIT 3PL allotted 2,20,609 equity shares at a price of ₹2,700 per share, as confirmed in the second report published on 21 May 2026. This capital is earmarked to strengthen end-to-end logistics capabilities — particularly in fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) and fast-moving consumer durables (FMCD) verticals — and accelerate revenue growth across South India.
Financial Context and Strategic Rationale
Swamy & Sons Group reported a turnover of ₹215.4 crores in FY23, which declined to ₹207.1 crores in FY25, according to scanx.trade. Concurrently, FIT 3PL — the acquiring vehicle — recorded a turnover of ₹133.18 crores as of March 31, 2025, down from ₹160.38 crores in FY23. These figures indicate sustained revenue pressure in both entities prior to the deal. The acquisition targets geographic and segmental expansion: Swamy & Sons operates from Hyderabad, a key logistics hub in Telangana, and maintains infrastructure serving South Indian FMCG clients. TVS Supply Chain Solutions’ move aligns with broader industry consolidation trends; for example, Mahindra Logistics acquired Locus Robotics-backed logistics tech firm Locus in 2023 to enhance route optimization, while Delhivery expanded its cold-chain footprint across six states in FY24 using ₹320 crore in debt financing.
Operational and Supply Chain Implications
For supply chain professionals, the transaction signals intensified competition in India’s third-party logistics (3PL) market — valued at $34.2 billion in 2025 and projected to reach $58.6 billion by 2030 (Statista, 2024). With over 70% of India’s FMCG distribution still reliant on fragmented, asset-light intermediaries, TVS Supply’s integration of Swamy & Sons’ warehousing assets offers immediate scale in high-density urban corridors like Hyderabad, Bengaluru, and Chennai. Unlike pure-play tech platforms, this acquisition embeds physical infrastructure: Swamy & Sons operates 12+ fulfillment centers across Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, and Karnataka. The two-tranche structure also introduces execution risk — if Swamy & Sons’ financial performance deteriorates before the September 30, 2027 deadline, renegotiation or termination clauses may be triggered, affecting capital deployment timelines. Practitioners should monitor how TVS Supply deploys the ₹59.56 crore: whether toward WMS upgrades, last-mile fleet electrification, or integration with its existing TMS platform, which currently serves over 140 clients including Unilever, Nestlé, and Samsung.
Source: scanx.trade
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










