Shopify acquires shipping logistics startup Deliverr for $2.1B

Shopify today announced that it will acquire Deliverr, a San Francisco, California-based e-commerce fulfillment startup, for $2.1 billion in cash and stock. The deal, rumors of which were reported in April by Bloomberg, is the largest acquisition in Shopify’s history, and Shopify founder and CEO Tobi Lütke says that it will enable the company to create an “end-to-end logistics” platform for millions of merchants.

“Our goal is to not only level the playing field for independent businesses, but tilt it in their favor — turning their size and agility into their superpower,” Lütke said in a blog post detailing the acquisition. “Together with Deliverr, SFN will give millions of growing businesses access to a simple, powerful logistics platform that will allow them to make their customers happy over and over again.”

Specifically, Shopify says that Deliverr will combine with with Shopify Fulfillment Network (SFN) — Shopify’s fulfillment service that merchants can use to store inventory and fulfill orders — to strengthen SFN’s merchant inventory management capabilities. Deliverr’s technology will also power Shop Promise, a new service that will provide customers two-day and next-day delivery, as well as expanded options for storage, freight, inventory preparation and returns.

“Our technology and expertise in inventory management, inventory placement, and demand chain combines perfectly with Shopify’s roadmap, enabling us to now build an end-to-end logistics platform together,” Deliverr co-founder and CEO Harish Abbott said in a statement. “Shopify has been building the future of merchant-first fulfillment solutions, and our team has a track record of helping businesses of all sizes streamline their operations. We’re excited to join Shopify in their mission to make commerce better for everyone while democratizing shipping and fulfillment for independent entrepreneurs.”

Road to acquisition

Deliverr was co-founded by former Symphony Commerce colleagues Abbott and Michael Krakaris in 2017, and had raised $490.9 million in capital prior to the Shopify purchase. The last funding round, a $240 million Series F led by Tiger Global, valued the company at $2 billion post-money.

Using predictive analytics and machine learning, Deliverr, which rents out warehouse space and uses warehouses’ fulfillment departments to pick and pack e-commerce orders, anticipates the demand for products based on geography and other variables. The platform then uses the analysis to “pre-position” items close to areas of demand, stocking items across its network of warehouses and sort centers and determining the best delivery method to ship to customers.

Under the acquisition agreement, Shopify said it will pay about 80% of the purchase price in cash (~$1.68 billion) and 20% (~$420 million) in Shopify Class A shares. As with many tech giants, Shopify has Class A shares that get one vote per share and Class B shares with several votes per share, with Class B shareholders having a controlling position.

Given Deliverr’s financials, is that on the light side of M&A? TechCrunch’s resident deal guru, Alex Wilhelm, doesn’t think so. He pointed out to me that the startup market valuation cycle was near an all-time high last November, meaning Deliverr raised at or around a peak while managing to defend this price in middle-early 2022. Of course, the deal could squeeze early investors if the company’s final round included provisions that ensured final investors would receive a set minimum return, but this remains to be seen.

Broader logistics strategy

Shopify’s Deliverr acquisition follows close on the heels of its $450 million purchase of 6 River Systems, which developed cloud-based software and mobile robots specifically designed for shipping and fulfillment. SFN, 6 River Systems and Deliverr will form a broader logistics unit within Shopify under the group’s newly appointed CEO, Aaron Brown, who has led SFN since 2020.

Fast shipping has become increasingly desirable for merchants as the pandemic impacts nearly every aspect of the supply chain — and as more retailers migrate online, spurred by pandemic-related restrictions. Sellers see automation as a means to this end. One in three claim to have integrated services like those offered by Deliverr into their supply chain management processes and one in four is working toward that goal, a survey from Symphony RetailAI found.

A 2021 PwC poll found that 41% of shoppers are willing to pay a premium for same-day delivery. On the flip side, only 20% of consumers were willing to forgive retailers for delivery disruptions due to supply chain issues in 2021 — highlighting the pressure on retailers to deliver.

Statista predicts that the supply chain management market could be worth $30.91 billion by 2026, up from $19.58 billion in 2022. Venture firms invested more than $11 billion in the sector last year, according to Crunchbase data.

In its most recent fiscal quarter, Shopify missed analysts’ estimates, posting $1.2 billion in revenue — short of the $1.25 billion expected. Evidently, the company sees logistics as its next major profit driver, not to mention a key piece in its fight against Amazon, which recently launched a program, Buy with Prime, that allows Amazon Prime members to shop from merchants’ stores and access free delivery and returns benefits.

“Retailers have been engaged in a race to the bottom with delivery options for years, but it really got heightened after the pandemic began, when digital commerce sales picked up massively. There’s an interesting competition heating up between Amazon and Shopify, with Amazon recently encroaching on Shopify’s turf through Buy With Prime and Shopify certainly taking aim at taking a larger share of the online retail opportunity,” Gartner analyst Matt Moorut told TechCrunch via email. “The Deliverr tie up promises to add value to retailers that are already using Shopify to power their carts … If Shopify can integrate Deliverr’s offering into their existing platform, it promises to give a lot more security to online retailers that they’ll be able to continue selling, whatever further disruptions lie ahead.”