CRED-Meta deal: Why is Meta paying $900 mn for CRED's largest minority stake?
While Meta will own only 20% of CRED, it would be one of the largest shareholders in the company but with a minority stake

- Jun 23, 2026,
- Updated Jun 23, 2026 4:44 PM IST
Meta's $900-million investment in fintech unicorn CRED is being viewed as one of the most unusual and strategically significant transactions in India's startup ecosystem. The social media giant is not only investing in the company but is also bringing on board CRED founder Kunal Shah to lead WhatsApp globally, raising questions about the rationale behind paying such a premium for a minority stake.
Following the transaction, Meta is expected to hold a 20% stake in CRED. While that remains a minority investment from a corporate governance perspective—anything below 50% is typically classified as a minority stake—the captable suggests a more nuanced picture.
Don't Miss: From CRED to WhatsApp: Inside Kunal Shah’s net worth, startup fortune and investments
According to startup intelligence platform Tracxn, Shah owns around 11.5% of CRED, while QED Innovation Labs holds 11.7%, Peak XV Partners owns 9.9%, and the ESOP pool accounts for 11.3%.
Other investors collectively hold about 43% of the company. This means Meta could emerge as the single largest shareholder in CRED despite owning only 20%, a distinction that underscores the strategic nature of the investment.
Addressing concerns around data access, Shah said in a post on X that Meta would join CRED as a minority investor and would have no access to member data.
The bigger question, however, is why Meta chose to invest at all.
Industry observers believe the answer lies as much in talent as in ownership. India has evolved into WhatsApp's largest and arguably most innovative market, with users leveraging the platform not just for communication but also for payments, commerce and business interactions. Many investors argue that the way Indians use WhatsApp today could shape how the platform evolves globally.
Don't Miss: Before leading WhatsApp, Kunal Shah was betting on India's digital infra and UPI growth
To drive that next phase in digital payments, Meta may be looking for leadership with deep experience in consumer internet products and financial services. Shah fits that profile. He first built FreeCharge, one of India's pioneering digital payments platforms, which was later acquired by Snapdeal, before founding CRED in 2018, a company that has expanded across payments, lending, insurance, commerce, wealth and credit cards.
The timing also coincides with improving business fundamentals at CRED. The company recently reported its first profitable quarter. Shah said CRED has scaled from zero to nearly $325 million (around Rs 3,200 crore) in annual revenue and is set to announce its fifth ESOP buyback programme.
For many in the startup ecosystem, the deal signals that Meta's bet may be as much on Kunal Shah's product vision as it is on CRED's business prospects, a combination rarely seen in Indian startup funding.
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Meta's $900-million investment in fintech unicorn CRED is being viewed as one of the most unusual and strategically significant transactions in India's startup ecosystem. The social media giant is not only investing in the company but is also bringing on board CRED founder Kunal Shah to lead WhatsApp globally, raising questions about the rationale behind paying such a premium for a minority stake.
Following the transaction, Meta is expected to hold a 20% stake in CRED. While that remains a minority investment from a corporate governance perspective—anything below 50% is typically classified as a minority stake—the captable suggests a more nuanced picture.
Don't Miss: From CRED to WhatsApp: Inside Kunal Shah’s net worth, startup fortune and investments
According to startup intelligence platform Tracxn, Shah owns around 11.5% of CRED, while QED Innovation Labs holds 11.7%, Peak XV Partners owns 9.9%, and the ESOP pool accounts for 11.3%.
Other investors collectively hold about 43% of the company. This means Meta could emerge as the single largest shareholder in CRED despite owning only 20%, a distinction that underscores the strategic nature of the investment.
Addressing concerns around data access, Shah said in a post on X that Meta would join CRED as a minority investor and would have no access to member data.
The bigger question, however, is why Meta chose to invest at all.
Industry observers believe the answer lies as much in talent as in ownership. India has evolved into WhatsApp's largest and arguably most innovative market, with users leveraging the platform not just for communication but also for payments, commerce and business interactions. Many investors argue that the way Indians use WhatsApp today could shape how the platform evolves globally.
Don't Miss: Before leading WhatsApp, Kunal Shah was betting on India's digital infra and UPI growth
To drive that next phase in digital payments, Meta may be looking for leadership with deep experience in consumer internet products and financial services. Shah fits that profile. He first built FreeCharge, one of India's pioneering digital payments platforms, which was later acquired by Snapdeal, before founding CRED in 2018, a company that has expanded across payments, lending, insurance, commerce, wealth and credit cards.
The timing also coincides with improving business fundamentals at CRED. The company recently reported its first profitable quarter. Shah said CRED has scaled from zero to nearly $325 million (around Rs 3,200 crore) in annual revenue and is set to announce its fifth ESOP buyback programme.
For many in the startup ecosystem, the deal signals that Meta's bet may be as much on Kunal Shah's product vision as it is on CRED's business prospects, a combination rarely seen in Indian startup funding.
For Unparalleled coverage of India's Businesses and Economy – Subscribe to Business Today Magazine
