Venture capital firms infused a total of $17.2 billion investment into the Indian startup ecosystem during January-July 2021, according to data released by the Indian Private Equity and Venture Capital Association (IVCA) and Venture Intelligence (VI).
This is much higher than the $11.1 billion and $13 billion investments made by VCs in 2020 and 2019, respectively.
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VC funding included seed to Series F investments in companies less than 10 years old, and late-stage tech investments.
Some of the big VC deals included those in Udaan, Lenskart, Zomato, Swiggy, PharmEasy, Meesho, Pine Labs, Zeta, CRED, Razorpay, HealthifyMe, BYJU’S, Unacademy, Eruditus, Vedantu, Dunzo, Bira 91, Boat, Mamaearth, MyGlamm, Uniphore Software Systems, Yellow.ai, Entropik and others.
“The strong deal flow is expected to continue in the latter half of the year with movement forecast in the AI/ML, Edtech and food tech space,” IVCA said.
The report said the average VC deal cheque size expanded in 2021 across stages when compared to 2019-20.
The amount put in seed funding was approximately $1.8 million compared to $ 1.2 million in 2019, the report said.
The amount invested in Series A and B funding witnessed a marginal increase with $6.8 million investment across 110 deals till now.
Additionally, the growth stage deals almost doubled this year — $7.5 million in 2021 — whereas it was close to $4.9 million in 2020, the report said.
The average amount infused in the late-stage tech ecosystem till July in 2021 was $217.57 million across 38 deals, it added.
“There are tailwinds supporting exits as the ecosystem has started actioning IPOs and offshore listing for Indian startups is under discussion, with the Government of India also in sync with this principally,” IVCA President Rajat Tandon said.
The Indian consumption story is really playing out, users have been switching to digital buying more through the COVID times, he added.
“Amidst positive sentiment, cautious optimism, increased funding numbers, larger cheque sizes even at early-stage deals, and the wonderful Government of India support, refer to the recent announcement of opening up domestic capital from EPFO and LIC for Indian AIFs and startups, the state of the Indian Startup-VC Market looks stable and promising,” he said.
SoftBank Corp led the charts with approximately $3.5 billion worth of investments in the past three years, followed by Tiger Global, Temasek, Sequoia Capital and Prosus Ventures, the report noted.
In terms of the most active VC investors with AIF (Alternative Investment Funds) vehicles, IIFL VC led the deal street with close to $260 million investment, followed by Matrix Partners India with $110 million and Mirae Asset Global Investments with $91 million investment, it added.