Mint Hyderabad

Deals warm up, hint funding spring near

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$75 million; and electric vehicle company River’s $40-million raise from investors led by Yamaha Motor.

Like most other markets, India has seen deal activity in three buckets—venture capital, growth and buyout. With technology investment­s taking a beating worldwide and liquidity drying up, the early stage or venture capital deal flow was the most hit.

However, deals worth $443 million were struck in January, which nearly doubled to $835 million in February, Tracxn data showed. Though the numbers compare to $1.4 billion in January 2023 and $552.8 million in February 2023, bankers and investors expect things to get even better from hereon.

“We are going to have by far one of our best quarters with seven deals closing this quarter,” said Kashyap Chanchani, co-founder and managing partner of The Rainmaker Group, a boutique investment bank. “The investors are certainly more open to deploying capital and activity will pick up going forward,” he added.

In a recent interview with Mint, Sugandhi Matta, partner with ABC Impact, a Temasekbac­ked fund said it is looking to invest more in India. “Though India is an accessible market, it is also very expensive. Valuation continues to be a challenge in the Indian market. Our investment in the country is a matter of timing and correct pricing,” she said, adding that the fund is looking to write cheques between

$10 million and

$45 million in Indian companies and the activity is likely to pick up pace in 2024.

Neeraj Shrimali, managing director and co-head, digital and technology vertical for Avendus Group’s investment banking business, expects more than 18-20 companies to hit the public markets over the next 18-24 months, paving the way for more late-stage and secondary deals. “There are various pools of capital available for Indian startups, now more than ever. These include sovereigns, private equity and even crossover investors who are now keen on good Indian assets. We will see secondarie­s worth more than $7-8 billion executed in the same period,” he said.

“We are seeing an uptick in the number of companies that are showcasing stronger unit economics and profitabil­ity and investors are coming to the table to engage with these founders. In addition, there is sort of a valuation equilibriu­m setting in between the buyers and sellers, relative to a year back or as was in 2021, leading to more deal closures,” Shrimali said.

Meanwhile, close to a dozen India-focused funds like Stellaris Capital, A91, Peak XV, Accel Capital, Matrix Partners, Lightspeed Venture Partners and Peer Capital have raised funds to invest in startups.

Such investors are beginning to reach out to companies. According to various estimates, there is more than $10 billion of dry powder waiting to be invested in the country across stages. “We are seeing a lot of tech-based deal flow coming our way, companies that have gone through cost rationaliz­ation and have either hit profitabil­ity or has a clear path to profitabil­ity. With the valuations having corrected from the zero interest rate policy era of 2021-22, we are engaging more with companies to invest now,” said Gopal Jain, managing partner, Gaja Capital.

But deals worth $443 million were struck in January, which nearly doubled to $835 million in February

 ?? ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? According to various estimates, there’s more than $10 billion of dry powder waiting to be invested in India across stages.
ISTOCKPHOT­O According to various estimates, there’s more than $10 billion of dry powder waiting to be invested in India across stages.

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