BusinessLine (Hyderabad)

Agri-foodtech funding fell 60% to $940 m in 2023

- KV Kurmanath

Agri-foodtech start-ups have raised $940 million across 129 deals in 2023, which is 60 per cent lower than in 2022. The number of deals remained nearly flat, compared with 133 deals in 2022, indicating smaller deal sizes.

“The year saw more earlystage deals than in 2022, indicating continued interest by investors in the category but at much lower valuations than in previous years,” a report by AgFunder and Omnivore said.

“The global downturn in agrifood investment­s is attributed to fewer and smaller deals, but the situation in India indicates a fundamenta­l shift. Although the number of deals remains nearly unchanged, the investment approach in India has become more selective and merit-based, suggesting a gradual and promising revival of the sector,” Louisa

Burwood-Taylor, Managing Editor of AgFunder News, said.

Unlike in the global market, however, funds raised by Indian agrifood start-ups were not far below the $1.3 billion garnered pre-Covid in 2019, suggesting normalisat­ion of market conditions after a period of excessive valuations.

E-GROCERY

The e-grocery category in India was still the most funded, though it received 46 per cent less year-on-year at $420 million. Agribusine­ss and fintech were next with $162 million funding, which was lower by 62 per cent year-on-year.

“Together, e-grocery and agri marketplac­es and fintech accounted for 62 per cent of the capital raised in 2023,” according to the sixth India AgriFoodTe­ch Investment Report.

While deal sizes in early stage (seed and Series A) fell by 50 per cent, in the growth stage (Series B and Series C) it declined by 39 per cent and in the later phase (Series D and beyond) by a whopping 89 per cent.

OFF THE LIMELIGHT

All parts of the supply chain received substantia­lly less funding in 2023 than a year ago, with midstream startups faring the worst with a decrease of 80 per cent.

In the later-stage many start-ups raised follow-on bridge capital in 2023, resulting in smaller deals. This is in line with global agrifoodte­ch later-stage investment trends, where overall valuations have been severely corrected.

Mark Kahn, Managing Partner of Omnivore, said:

“From unbridled growth strategies, the focus is squarely on prioritisi­ng building a strong business model, focusing on profitabil­ity, and creating value for customers and stakeholde­rs.”

OUTLOOK

“Like in 2023, this year will be a great vintage year to invest in promising start-ups, especially for founders who are building dierentiat­ed and unit economical­ly viable businesses from the beginning,” Kahn said.

A concerning trend is the limited participat­ion of agrifood investors, with Omnivore being one of the few remaining, alongside generalist and climate-focused VCs. This scenario underscore­s the need for more committed investors across all stages, the report said.

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