Business Standard

Early funding into start-ups may hit a stumbling block

- SAI ISHWAR & PEERZADA ABRAR

Even though the spread of Covid-19 and the subsequent lockdown have severely affected the start-up ecosystem in the country, experts believe many of them, especially those in early stages, are going to find it extremely difficult to get access to funds even after the situation improves. Venture capital (VC) investors, they said, would prefer to only invest in their existing portfolio to protect their investment­s than putting any fresh money into new ideas.

“Is the situation getting better in India, is it stabilisin­g or getting worse? VCS or funds would see an opportunit­y to get in and get in early. But if the situation is getting worse, then for early-stage ideas, I think you’ll see a longer cycle (for raising money),” said Prashant Mehta, partner at

VC firm Lightbox. “However, strong founders with great (entreprene­urial) background­s and economics will not have trouble raising money,” he said.

This comes as seed investment­s in India during the January-march quarter, was at the lowest level in five quarters.

According to data compiled by Venture Intelligen­ce, seed-stage funding dropped 28 per cent to $48 million in the quarter compared to the same period last year.

The number of deals, too, declined to 40 from 70 in the year-ago period.

According to Vishesh Rajaram, co-founder of Bengaluru-based VC firm Speciale Invest, historical data suggests that seed-stage funding environmen­t would drop the most, though they would be the first one to bounce back. “A lot of our (portfolio) companies are assuming to low revenue for the next 6-9 months and projecting their road map for the next 18-24 months.” Rajaram, whose fund largely focuses on businessto-business (B2B) deep-tech start-ups, was referring a Redpoint Venture partner Thomasz Tunguz’s study, which showed that earlystage funding suffered a huge fall during the global financial crisis in 2008-09.

Seed stage funding, however, was the fastest to recover among all stages.

According to experts, venture capital i nvestors are going to monitor the whole situation closely over the next 1-3 months before making any decision on investment.

“Investment firms will now have the mindset to focus on protecting (their) existing i nvestments and helping them sail through the next couple of quarters rather than looking at new investment­s, especially in unknown sectors,” said Sreedhar Prasad, an independen­t consultant and a former venture partner at Kalaari Capital.

The overall VC investment has also taken a hit in the March quarter of 2020. During this period, VC investment­s fell 22 per cent to $1.74 billion in value terms when compared with the same period l ast year, the Venture Intelligen­ce data showed.

According to experts, venture capital investors are going to monitor the whole situation closely over the next 1-3 months before making any decision on investment

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India