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Navam Capital closes maiden fund at Rs 315 Cr

EntrackrEntrackr · 8d ago
Navam Capital closes maiden fund at Rs 315 Cr
Medial

Navam Capital closes maiden fund at Rs 315 Cr Navam Capital has announced the final close of its maiden fund, Navam Venture Fund-I (NVF-I), with the early-stage Category II AIF raising Rs 250 crore and exercising its green shoe option to close at over Rs 315 crore ($35 million). The venture capital (VC) firm has already invested in eight startups and plans to back 15–16 in total. The India-focused fund will back intellectual-property-led deep-technology startups built in India for global markets, spanning areas such as advanced computing, semiconductors, robotics, drone technology, space technology, industrial automation, enterprise AI, climate tech, and materials science. According to Navam Capital, NVF-I has attracted a diversified limited partner base, including technology founders, industrial groups and conglomerates, business operators, and family offices. Launched in 2008 by Rajeev Mantri, the Kolkata-based Navam Capital focuses on early-stage investments in frontier technologies and science-driven innovation. It is largely backed by domestic capital, with commitments from family offices, corporate groups, ultra-high-net-worth individuals, and technology founders. The fund typically writes first cheques of Rs 5–8 crore at the seed and pre-Series A stages, while keeping capital aside for follow-on rounds. The VC firm also selectively participates in Series A and Series B rounds to maintain stage diversity in its portfolio. The fund’s portfolio includes startups working on reconfigurable computing architectures, swarm robotics, multi-sensor satellite imaging, quantum-safe cybersecurity hardware, AI-driven industrial inspection systems, advanced drones, and novel sensing technologies.

Yali Capital closes maiden deeptech fund at Rs 893 Cr

EntrackrEntrackr · 6m ago
Yali Capital closes maiden deeptech fund at Rs 893 Cr
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Yali Capital closes maiden deeptech fund at Rs 893 Cr Venture capital firm Yali Capital has closed its maiden deeptech focused fund at Rs 893 crore (about $103.2 million). Yali Capital had launched the early stage fund at Rs 810 crore in July last year to back startups operating in the deeptech sector. The fund intends to invest in startups across chip design, robotics, genomics, smart manufacturing, aerospace, and AI sectors, Yali Capital said in a press release. The VC firm has raised capital from corporates such as Infosys, Qualcomm Ventures, the DPIIT Fund of Funds for Startups, and Evolvence, among others. Additionally, TVS Capital founder Gopal Srinivasan, Rare Enterprises chief executive Utpal Sheth, and JM Financial’s managing director Vishal Kampani are among its notable investors. Launched by Ganapathy Subramaniam and Mathew Cyriac, Yali Capital is a SEBI approved Category II AIF and had initially set its target close to Rs 500 crore, with an additional greenshoe option of Rs 310 crore. “China is well ahead in the deeptech space and has overtaken America. India has all the potential, from services to deeptech, but certainly has much distance to cover,” said Ganapathy Subramaniam. Yali Capital has made five investments, including genomics startup 4baseCare, robotics startup Perceptyne Robots, and fabless chip design company C2i Semiconductors. It plans to expand its portfolio to eight companies by the end of the year.

Artha Select Fund closes at Rs 432 Cr; AUM crosses Rs 1,200 Cr

EntrackrEntrackr · 5m ago
Artha Select Fund closes at Rs 432 Cr; AUM crosses Rs 1,200 Cr
Medial

Artha India Ventures (AIV) has closed its follow-on fund, Artha Select Fund (ASF), at Rs 432 crore, 131% above its Rs 330 crore target. With this, Artha’s total Assets Under Management have crossed Rs 1,200 crore. ASF will invest in the top 15% of performers from Artha’s existing portfolio of over 135 companies across Artha Venture Fund I, Artha Continuum Fund, and the soon-to-launch AVF II. The fund will write Series B and C cheques of around Rs 20 crore each, for 12–14 winners over the next four years. With 33 exits to date, Artha claims to have built a proven track record of identifying and nurturing category leaders. ASF creates a capital bridge from early-stage to growth, addressing India’s “missing middle” funding gap where many Series A–C companies stall due to limited capital and a lack of operational support. According to Artha, Indian family offices and ultra-high-net-worth individuals anchor 80% of the fund’s capital, with the remaining 20% from global LPs in Singapore, UAE, Mauritius, Hong Kong, Africa, and the U.S. Sponsor AIV has committed nearly 10% of the fund. ASF’s roster of backers includes household names such as Atul Kirloskar’s Family Office, DSP Family Office, Shahi Exports, HIRA Group, and Anikarth Ventures. “ASF allows us to stay invested in our most promising companies well into their scale-up phases,” said Anirudh A. Damani, Managing Partner of Artha Venture Fund & Artha Select Fund. “India has no shortage of promising ventures, but far too many face a capital drought between Series A and C. ASF ensures our winners have the firepower, strategic guidance, and operational backing to compete globally while preserving founder ownership and focus.” Artha, through its various funds, has backed startups such as OYO, Rapido, Purplle and Leverage Edu. Under the new fund, it has so far evaluated six companies and selected only spacetech startup Agnikul Cosmos, with an investment commitment of Rs 20–40 crore.

Unicorn India Ventures closes Fund III at Rs 1,200 Cr

EntrackrEntrackr · 22h ago
Unicorn India Ventures closes Fund III at Rs 1,200 Cr
Medial

Unicorn India Ventures closes Fund III at Rs 1,200 Cr Deeptech-focused venture capital firm Unicorn India Ventures has closed its third fund at Rs 1,200 crore, surpassing its initial target of Rs 1,000 crore. LPs in Fund III include HNIs, UHNIs, family offices, and institutions. Backers include Sidbi, SBI, Nabard, and the state governments of Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, and Odisha. According to Unicorn India Ventures, the fund focuses on investments in semiconductors, spacetech, and AI infrastructure. The VC firm claims to have already seen strong early traction, with seven to eight portfolio companies witnessing substantial follow-on rounds. The fund will make 20 investments with an average ticket size of 10-15 crore. It plans to announce four investments in the coming months across quantum sensing, agritech, and spacetech. Across its three funds, the VC firm has built a portfolio of nearly 50 companies, with a total portfolio valuation of about $5 billion. The firm says that it is largely staying away from AI applications (SaaS) and focusing on AI infrastructure such as semiconductors, data centres, power, and enabling technologies. It is also actively exploring nuclear micro power generation as an enabler for AI. Another major trend playing out in the fund is the growing presence of academicians as startup founders. Four to five companies in Fund III are led by academicians, with one of them being a teaching academic. Unicorn India Ventures (UIV) is a Mumbai-based, SEBI-registered Alternative Investment Fund (AIF) launched in 2015 by Bhaskar Majumdar and Anil Joshi. It acts as an early-stage venture capital firm investing in technology-led startups, focusing on seed to pre-Series A rounds with investments ranging from Rs 1 to 10 crore. The firm supports B2B, SaaS, and DeepTech sectors, aiming to build, support, and scale companies, with over 60 investments to its credit.

Transition VC closes Fund I at Rs 700 Cr

EntrackrEntrackr · 1m ago
Transition VC closes Fund I at Rs 700 Cr
Medial

Transition VC has announced the final close of its debut fund at Rs 700 crore (approximately $77 million), overshooting its initial target of Rs 400 crore. The fund is backed by a community of institutional investors, corporates, family offices, strategic partners, and industry leaders. According to Transition VC, this LP network gives the firm a meaningful edge, strengthening thesis development, sharpening its ability to identify emerging trends early, and deepening the quality of deal flow. For founders, this LP network acts as a real commercial accelerator by converting pilots into purchase orders, opening doors to domestic and global markets, and directly shaping adoption pathways. Transition VC plans to invest at the post-product, pre-PMF stage, while strategically constructing a portfolio in which companies are complementary rather than competitive. By doing so, the firm enables founders to share insights, supply chains, and talent across the portfolio. To date, Transition VC claims to have supported 17 startups through Fund I, targeting a final portfolio of up to 25 companies. The firm has backed companies such as CIMware, Comminent, Matel, EMO, Hydgen, Dynolt, and Promethean. It says that more than half of the fund has been committed, and the firm is looking to deploy the remaining capital into founders building high-conviction solutions across the energy transition spectrum. Co-founded by Raiyaan Shingati and Mohammed Shoeb Al, Transition VC is an energy-transition-focused venture capital fund that invests early, catalytic capital into the future of energy in India, backing engineering-led companies building the infrastructure for the transition via electrification, energy storage, industrial decarbonisation, alternate fuels, and next-generation manufacturing.

Kettleborough VC launches fund II with Rs 80 Cr target, closes Rs 35 Cr in first tranche

EntrackrEntrackr · 6m ago
Kettleborough VC launches fund II with Rs 80 Cr target, closes Rs 35 Cr in first tranche
Medial

Venture capital firm Kettleborough VC, founded by early-stage investor Nisarg Shah, has launched its second fund with a target corpus of Rs 80 crore and announced a first close at Rs 35 crore. The fund is backed by a mix of family offices and entrepreneurs from India and the US. According to Kettleborough, Fund II will continue to invest in deeply experienced founders at the earliest stages, typically those with over 10 years of domain expertise and a strong execution focus. The firm will write initial cheques of $300,000–$500,000 in about 10 startups, with significant follow-on reserves for high-performing bets. Founded in 2021, Kettleborough VC has built a name as a conviction-led, construct-specific fund. Its Fund I backed 12 startups including Zippmat, InPrime, Finhaat, and Elivaas, nine of which received their first institutional cheque from Kettleborough. These portfolio companies have since raised follow-on rounds from investors like Omnivore, Lightspeed, 3one4, and Bessemer. “We only back founders for whom the startup is a natural outcome of a decade-long journey in their domain. Fund I has validated this thesis with strong portfolio traction and early PMF. Fund II doubles down on this conviction,” said Shah. Kettleborough added that it focuses on “Dhandha-first” businesses, with interest across financial services, commerce infrastructure, and vertical SaaS/AI platforms. Shah has personally backed over 30 startups, with 10 exits and 80 follow-on rounds, including hits like Foxtale, Onebanc, and Homeville.

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