Mint Hyderabad

Sector leaders defy funding woes with successive rounds

The trend signals a shift in investor sentiment, favouring startups pledging profitabil­ity.

- Priyamvada C. pğiyamvada.c@livemint.com BENGALURU

Many growth- and latestage companies have managed to secure capital in quick succession over the last 6–8 months at higher valuations, indicating a shift in investor sentiment, favouring startups with clear paths to profitabil­ity and product-market fit.

Earlier this week, B2B fintech startup Perfios turned unicorn after raising $80 million from Teachers’ Venture Growth. The announceme­nt came just six months after the company raised $229 million from Kedaara Capital in its Series D round in September. Others, include dairy-tech startup Country Delight, D2C backpack startup Mokobara, logistics provider Xpressbees and InsuranceD­ekho.

Country Delight, which closed its Series D round in April 2023, secured $20 million in Series E money in January. Country Delight’s Series D round was raised at a valuation of $615 million, and at $819 million in the following round, according to media reports.

Similarly, InsuranceD­ekho, which raised one of the largest ever Series A funding in February 2023, secured $60 million in a Series B round in October at a higher valuation of $600 million, according to data sourced by Tracxn. The round was raised at a higher valuation of $600 million, as per media reports.

“We have our eyes set on unit economics. At the company level, we are profitable…this funding will allow us to accelerate our efforts, reach more customers, and innovate further,” InsuranceD­ekho’s chief Ankit Agrawal said in October.

Manu Rikhye, partner, Merak Ventures, expressed similar views: “Companies like Country Delight, Xpressbees, and InsuranceD­ekho are attracting investment because investors are now prioritizi­ng more than just rapid growth. They are looking at fundamenta­ls such as unit economics. Only a few startups that have followed these principles are gaining the attention of high-quality investors.”

InsuranceD­ekho, Xpressbess, and Country Delight did not respond to Mint’s requests for comment till the time of publishing.

Although it’s premature to interpret it as a sign of market froth, investors are of the opinion that private markets have rationaliz­ed, with only the best companies securing funding.

“If startups in this environmen­t are getting funded in eight months, it essentiall­y means they are category leaders, demonstrat­ing a clear product market fit and investors believe there will be a large IPO story within two–three years,” Matrix partners’ managing director Sudipto Sannigrahi said.

Sannigrahi’s views mirror the success of Country Delight. When the company initiated its Series D fund-raising in May 2022, its year-on-year growth was two and a half times, with revenues soaring by 50% within just six months, its co-founder Chakradhar Gade had said then. “Country Delight is now looking at becoming a leading natural food essentials business where we are looking to widen our product portfolio to cover all the food essentials a kitchen needs on a daily basis.”

However, these quick rounds pale in comparison with the rapid pace of deal closures witnessed during the peak of the funding boom in 2021, and during the pandemic years when capital was more readily accessible. With the surge in digitaliza­tion opportunit­ies and an expanding addressabl­e market, funding witnessed a meteoric rise, aided by higher liquidity and inflationa­ry growth across assets.

However, over the past two years, the markets have witnessed a significan­t correction, with most startups taking longer to close a series round. This delay was evident for B2B platform Captain Fresh and payment solutions platform Escrowpay, which had significan­t gaps between successive funding rounds within a specific series.

Captain Fresh’s Series C round began in September 2023 and continued till February, as per data sourced from Tracxn. On the other hand, Escrowpay saw its Series A round begin in October 2022 and extend till December 2023. “Startups like Captain Fresh and Escrowpay are encounteri­ng difficulti­es in securing funding, primarily due to challenges such as ambiguous market fit or operationa­l inefficien­cies,” Rikhye said, adding that this shift in the funding landscape has compelled these firms to reassess their business models.

Captain Fresh and Escrowpay did not respond to Mint's request for comment till the time of publishing.

Over the last six months, diverse funding trajectori­es underscore the market’s complexity, with investors attributin­g the gap between successive rounds to various factors, including due diligence.

 ?? ?? Earlier this week, B2B fintech startup Perfios turned unicorn by raising $80 million from Teachers’ Venture Growth, six months after it raised $229 million.
Earlier this week, B2B fintech startup Perfios turned unicorn by raising $80 million from Teachers’ Venture Growth, six months after it raised $229 million.

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