Business Standard

INDIAN TECH FIRMS SHUN CHINA, MOVE TO US CAMP

- PEERZADA ABRAR

Strained ties with China, in the wake of the Galwan Valley face-off, are driving Indian tech start-ups to look to the US for investment­s and partnershi­ps.

Opposed to a recent trend where Chinese investors were making serious inroads into the Indian technology ecosystem, Indian companies are attracting a series of blockbuste­r investment­s from US tech giants such as Google and Facebook as well as large companies and private equity firms, say industry insiders and analysts.

Nearly 30 per cent of about $10 billion invested in Indian tech start-ups in 2019 came from investors based in China, including Hong Kong. However, this is about to change as Chinese investors are expected to put planned investment­s in the country on hold.

In April, the Centre had changed foreign direct investment norms and introduced a pre-clearance mechanism on investment­s from China.

“The face- off changed everything. Because of China’s actions, India is moving towards the US fold and the Western alliance. American firms are coming into India fast to invest in the companies here,” said Manjeet Kripalani, executive director at foreign policy think-tank Gateway House. “It is a much better bargain than having China embedded in the country.”

There has been a series of large investment­s by US firms in India recently, including Google’s $10 billion India digitisati­on fund, and retailer Walmart investing an additional $1.2 billion in its Indian arm Flipkart.

Facebook invested $5.7 billion in April in Jio Platforms, the digital arm of Reliance Industries (RIL). Google announced a $4.5 billion investment in Jio Platforms on Wednesday. Jio has raised $20 billion i n three months from firms based in the US, including private equity firms Silver Lake and KKR.

In June, Edtech start-up Byju’s became a decacorn and crossed $10.5billion valuation after raising nearly $100 million from Silicon Valley investor Mary Meeker's Bond Capital. Before that Byju’s had raised $200 Tiger Global and another $200 million from General Atlantic.

Experts said these investment­s reflect that the global geopolitic­s is forcing companies to choose between the US and China, and driving investment decisions in technology space. “It is clear that India is aligning with the US. A lot of the China-specific moves were already in the works, and the current set of global events and border tensions just became the catalysts for their implementa­tion,” said Anand Prasanna, managing partner at Iron Pillar, a venture growth investor specializi­ng in technology investment­s in India. “And US companies are seeing this as an opportunit­y to access the large Indian market without the threat of Chinese competitio­n.”

The Indian digital market includes 450 million smartphone users — expected to increase to 900 million by 2025, low data consumptio­n costs, and a fast-growing middle class, according to Blaise Fernandes, director at Gateway House. Referring to the World Economic Forum report, he said the consumer spending in India will grow from $1.5 trillion to $6 trillion by 2030, making the country the third-largest consumer market in the world.

China quietly had created a significan­t place for itself in India during the last five years — in the technology domain. Unable to persuade India to sign on to its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), China had entered the Indian market through venture investment­s in start-ups and penetrated the online ecosystem with its popular smartphone­s and their applicatio­ns (apps), according to Gateway House.

Chinese investors, such as Alibaba, Tencent, and Xiaomi, have collective­ly invested billions of dollars in the Indian start-up space. According to Gateway House, 18 of India’s 30 unicorns are Chinese-funded.

Salman Waris, managing partner at Techlegis Advocates and Solicitors, said India’s shift towards US companies for technology investment­s and partnershi­ps fits well with the present government’s ‘Atmanirbha­r Bharat’ and ‘Make in India’ initiative­s.

“This is unlike the Chinese investors whose primary strategic interest of Indian investment­s was to secure a long-term big market for Chinese products,” said Waris.

Kazim Rizvi, founder of policy think-tank The Dialogue, said China’s mishandlin­g of the Covid-19 pandemic, surveillan­ce risks through its 5G technology and its aggressive misadventu­res at Ladakh have resulted in a loss of trust in major countries for the world’s most populated country.

“This has provided India a critical opportunit­y to be an alternativ­e to China by driving the next phase of digital, as well as economic growth globally,” said Rizvi. “The investment­s by Google and Facebook to the tune of almost $16 billion demonstrat­e India’s enhanced position as a global digital force to reckon with.”

Ankur Pahwa, partner and national leader, e-commerce and consumer internet at consultanc­y EY India, said digital transforma­tion in India is on “steroids” and the pace at which data is consumed and used is a significan­t opportunit­y for most internatio­nal players.

EXPERTS SAID THESE INVESTMENT­S REFLECT THAT THE GLOBAL GEOPOLITIC­S IS FORCING COMPANIES TO CHOOSE BETWEEN THE US AND CHINA, AND DRIVING INVESTMENT DECISIONS IN TECHNOLOGY SPACE

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