Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Niche consumer brands see growing investor interest

- Kavya Kothiyal kavya.k@livemint.com

MUMBAI: After the funding boom in the e-commerce and fintech space in 2014 and 2015, investor interest in niche consumer brands, once a no-go zone for global funds, has revived.

In the past couple of years, many consumer product startups, including yogurt maker Epigamia, organic juice brand Raw Pressery, and condiments and sauce maker Veeba, have attracted investors by the hordes with their niche product offerings aimed at the millennial­s.

Venture capital (VC) and private equity (PE) investors have, in fact, pumped in tens of millions of dollars in these young firms, given their unique product strategy, inno- vation and marketing initiative­s, which have even challenged FMCG giants such as Marico and Unilever.

Since 2015, PE and VC investors have put in $613 million in food and beverage consumer brands, show data from Venture Intelligen­ce, which tracks deals activity. Investors say rising demand for differenti­ated brands and improved access have created the opportunit­y for new brands to flourish.

“The consumer space is opening up with new brands and new entreprene­urs given the growing population and increasing demand for different brands. Fundamenta­ls are all in favour of this becoming a separate class of investment thesis. There are special funds focused on the consumer space only,” said Kanwaljit Singh, managing partner, Fireside Ventures.

According to Singh, access to consumers has become more democratiz­ed and is cutting through the mass market. “This is a fundamenta­l shift in how consumers are consuming the brands.” Fireside Ventures is an early-stage venture capital fund with a corpus of ₹340 crore, focused on consumer brands. The fund has invested in Yoga Bar, Samosa Singh, Goodness Beverages, Design Café, Bombay Shaving Co., Mama Earth, Vahdam Teas, Kwik 24, Magic Crate and Frog Bikes. “Strategic investors are ready to explore opportunit­ies in this space.

However, while the macros might indicate an opportunit­y in the consumer space, the sector presents its unique challenges to investors, as well as entreprene­urs. Achieving scale, cracking the distributi­on model and tackling changing consumer preference­s and tastes, are only a few headwinds they have to deal with. Consumer entreprene­urs say that venture capital investors, who are used to backing rapidly growing technology companies, need to adopt a cautious approach in the consumer space. Excessive investor exuberance could lead to not-so-great outcomes, they warn.

 ??  ?? Many consumer product startups, including organic juice brand Raw Pressery, have attracted investors by the hordes
Many consumer product startups, including organic juice brand Raw Pressery, have attracted investors by the hordes

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