The company is likely to choose one of its existing auditing partners -- PricewaterhouseCoopers, EY (formerly Ernst & Young) and KPMG -- as an advisor for the listing process.
Though Jabong was planning to list on a bourse in the US or Europe, it might explore options in India as well, a company source told Business Standard, adding the fashion retailer was putting the processes and systems in place for a listing.
The company refused to comment on the matter.
According to industry estimates, Jabong, which started operations in 2012, is currently valued at $450-500 million.
It houses more than 1,000 brands and generates annual sales (gross merchandise value) of $300 million.
Before this, fashion e-retailer Koovs had listed itself on AIM (formerly Alternative Investment Market), a sub-market of the London Stock Exchange, to become the first Indian e-commerce company to go abroad for listing.
Besides, other e-commerce companies like Snapdeal and Flipkart are looking to list over the next 12-18
How Amazon is building its India business
Amazon to launch its best selling e-reader in India
Flipkart acquires Myntra, to invest $100 million in fashion business