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Indian startups mop up $2.77 Bn in March 2024 quarter: Report

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Indian startups mop up $2.77 Bn in March 2024 quarter: Report
Medial

Indian startups registered a steady growth in fund inflow during the first quarter of 2023 as they managed to cross $2.75 billion in funding. Importantly, funding in March stood out for crossing the $1 billion threshold for the first time in 2024. However, even as funding recovers, layoffs, shutdowns and departure of top-level executives continue to loom. Indian startups mopped up $2.77 billion across 326 deals in the March quarter or Q1 2024, as per data compiled by TheKredible. This included 74 growth-stage deals worth $1.87 billion and 213 early-stage deals amounting to $898 million. There were 39 undisclosed rounds. Unlike in the first quarter of 2023, two startups – Krutrim SI Designs and Perfios – entered the unicorn club after their latest fundraise in the first quarter of 2024. [Month-on-Month and Year-on-Year trend] March saw a decent jump in funding to $1.18 billion from $875 million in February and over $700 million in January. However, on a year-on-year basis, Q1 2024 recorded a fall from $12 billion in Q1 2022 and $3.4 billion in Q1 2023. [Top growth stage deals] Biotech startup Engrail scooped up $157 million in its Series B funding round to become the top-funded growth stage company in the first quarter of 2024. Audio series platform Pocket FM and logistics company Shadowfax managed to go past the $100 million funding mark in Q1 2024. Capillary Technologies, Perfios, Vivifi, Lohum, AiDash, ShareChat and Wow! Momo, were among the top 10 growth-stage deals. [Top early-stage deals] Digital lending platform mPokket, AI company Krutrim, energy tech company International Battery Company (IBC), blockchain company Avail, and generative AI startup Ema topped the list of early-stage startups. Check TheKredible for a full list. [City and segment-wise deals] City-wise, Bengaluru-based startups remain on top with 122 deals, contributing around 54% of the overall funding in the first quarter of 2024. Delhi-NCR and Mumbai followed with 77 and 54 deals, respectively. The list further counts Pune, Hyderabad, Chennai, Kolkata, Jaipur, Ahmedabad, and Thane among others. Segment-wise, e-commerce startups (including D2C brands) led the list with 64 deals followed by fintech (47), healthtech (31), SaaS (26), EV (15), AI (13), and edtech (13) startups. The complete breakdown of the city and segment can be found at TheKredible. [Stage-wise deals] Series-wise, 95 startups raised funding in Seed round followed by 71 Series A, 35 Pre-Series A, and 33 Pre-seed deals. Among early-stage, as many as 4 startups raised funding in their angel round. While 22 startups raised debt funding worth $276.65 million during the period. [Most active investors] Early-stage venture capital firm Inflection Point Ventures and Blume Ventures have emerged as the most active investors in Q1 2024 with 11 and 10 investments, respectively. Venture Catalysts was next on the list with nine deals followed by Fireside Ventures, Anicut, Accel, and Stride Ventures. The full list can be found at TheKredible. [Mergers and acquisitions] The first quarter of 2024 registered 26 merger and acquisition deals. Acquisition of Tapasya Educational Institutions by Veranda, InSemi by Infosys, Qdigi Services by Onsitego were the top 3 disclosed mergers and acquisitions deals. During the period, listed gaming firm Nazara’s subsidiary Nodwin acquired two startups: Comic Con India and Ninja Global FZCO. Among the undisclosed deals, Kuvera was acquired by fintech unicorn CRED, Captain Fresh took over CenSea while OneVerse acquired three startups including Spartan Poker, BatBall11, and Calling Station. Check the full list here. [Layoffs, shutdowns and departures] Layoffs continued in the March quarter as more than 1,100 employees received pink slips. Among them, foodtech company Swiggy topped the list with laying off of 350 employees followed by Cult.fit, InMobi, and Pristyn Care with 150, 125 and 120 employees, respectively. During the first quarter, five companies shut their operations. The list includes Resso, Rario, OKX India, GoldPe, and Muvin. Rario, however, added that it will launch a brand new platform that will enable users to play new and engaging cricket-based games. Besides layoffs and shutdowns, nearly two dozen top-level executives hung up their boots. Vijay Shekhar Sharma, founder of Paytm Payments Bank, resigned as the part-time non-executive chairman and board member of the company. Meanwhile, Third Wave Coffee’s chief executive officer Sushant Goel stepped down from his position to become a board member. The list also includes Indus Appstore CEO Rakesh Deshmukh, DealShare’s co-founder Sourjyendu Medda, and Fashinza’s co-founder Jamil Ahmed. [ESOP buyback] Amid all the ups and downs, the startup ecosystem witnessed employees stock buyback by growth and late-stage companies. For context, e-commerce company Meesho rolled out its largest ESOP buyback worth $25 million for 1,700 employees. Community management app MyGate and edtech company Classplus also announced their employee stock buyback program earlier this year. The full list can be found here. Visit TheKredible to see series-wise deals along with amount breakup, complete details of fund launches, and more insights. [Conclusion] As funding revives, it is safe to say that the trend in layoffs will also subside in the coming months, if not weeks. The strength in fintechs continues, and the category will continue to seek more money and throw up the next big startups, as scale arrives faster for many. Newer categories, be it AI, Chip Design, or niche parts of healthtech look set to emerge soon, going by the churning in the markets. The big hope is that the many corporate governance issues that have plagued the ecosystem in the past two years will also take a backseat now, thanks to lessons learnt hopefully. Looking at the numbers, especially for Q1 2022 ($12 billion), many would say that opportunities and capital have been wasted. But that is the very nature of the Startup world, with tiny amounts of money and a dollop of innovation sometimes achieving what no amount of money thrown at a problem doesn’t. We remain optimistic that by Q4 of this year, India’s startup ecosystem will be stronger and more diversified than ever before.

Funding and acquisitions in Indian startups this week [15-20 Apr]

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Funding and acquisitions in Indian startups this week [15-20 Apr]
Medial

During the week, equivalent to 37 Indian startups raised nearly $310 million in funding. These deals include 10 growth-stage deals and 17 early-stage deals. Meanwhile, one growth-stage startup and nine early-stage startups did not disclose the amount raised. Last week, about 21 early and growth-stage startups collectively raised around $105 million capital. [Growth-stage deals] Among the growth-stage deals, 10 startups raised $225.86 million in funding this week. Cleantech startup GPS Renewables led the list with $50 million in debt funding. The list was followed by vernacular social media platform ShareChat, housing finance company Altum Credo, B2B procurement marketplace ProcMart, and aerospace components manufacturer JJG Aero which raised $48.86 million, $40 million, $30 million, and $12 million, respectively. Further, consumer lending app RING, ESG and accounting and reporting consultation provider Uniqus Consultech, education-focussed NBFC Varthana, QSR chain Wow! Momo, and provider of decentralized solar-hybrid mini-grids Husk Power Systems. Electric cycle maker EMotorad also secured undisclosed funding this week. [Early-stage deals] Subsequently, 17 early-stage startups scooped funding worth $83.76 million during the week. Climate-focused deeptech startup Ecozen spearheaded the list followed by training, certification, and recruitment services provider for grey collar Emversity (Beyond Odds), gaming startup LightFury Games, NBFC FincFriends, and shipping intelligence platform ClickPost. The list further includes quick-service burger chain Good Flippin’ Burgers, emergency healthcare provider Medulance, elder care startup VitusCare, RevOps startup Clientell, and SaaS-based customer experience startup ZEPIC among others. The list of early-stage startups also includes nine startups that kept the funding amount undisclosed: IWill, TraqCheck, Svish, Advance Mobility, IndoSup, Almonds Ai, 100KMPH, Payinstacard, and BlackCarrot. For more information, visit TheKredible. [City and segment-wise deals] In terms of the city-wise number of funding deals, Delhi-NCR-based startups led with 13 deals followed by Bengaluru, Mumbai, Pune, Kolkata, Patna, and Hyderabad. Segment-wise, fintech and e-commerce startups shared the top spot with six deals each. The list further counts healthtech, SaaS, foodtech, Gaming, and Automotive tech startups among others. [Series-wise deals] During the week, Seed funding deals led the list with 16 deals while Series A deals are at the second position with 7 deals, both collectively forming around 30% of the total funding. Further, Debt, Series B, and Pre-Seed are next on the list among others. [Week-on-week funding trend] On a weekly basis, startup funding grew 195% to $109.6 million as compared to around $105 million raised during the previous week. The average funding in the last eight weeks stands at around $267 million with 27 deals per week. [Departure] During the week, Arjun Mohan, the chief executive officer of Byju’s, stepped down from his position seven months after joining the edtech firm. His departure is part of the company’s efforts to restructure and streamline its businesses. [Fund launches] Four startup-focused funds were launched this week. The list includes a non-dilutive, grant-based fund (WTFund) for young entrepreneurs by Zerodha co-founder Nikhil Kamath. Venture capital firms Caret Capital and Ev2 Ventures teamed up to launch a new $50 million fund focused on India. Angel investing platform BizDateUp Technologies introduced a $24 million Category I Alternative Investment Fund (AIF) for technology startups. Additionally, Inviga Healthcare Fund (IHF), a new healthcare-focused private equity fund, raised $20 million in its first close. [Layoffs] Content-to-commerce platform The Good Glamm Group has reduced its workforce by 15% or 150 employees in the last 12-15 months, according to the company. The reduction in the workforce appears to be part of efforts to cut costs and extend the runway amidst a tight funding environment. [Mergers & Acquisitions] This week witnessed four merger & acquisition deals. Agilitas Sports acquired the brand license for the Italian sports brand Lotto from WHP Global. VerSe Innovation, the parent company of Dailyhunt, acquired Magzter, a digital newsstand with a vast library of premium magazines and newspapers. Aurionpro Solutions Limited announced the strategic acquisition of banking and insurance-focused PaaS startup Arya.ai. Moreover, OneVerse Gaming, a Metaverse and gaming tech startup, acquired the online poker platform PokerSaint, marking its fourth acquisition in the gaming sector. Visit TheKredible to see series-wise deals along with amount breakup, complete details of fund launches, and more insights. [New launches] ▪️ Zomato unveils all-electric ‘Large Order Fleet’ ▪️ CASHe launches CASHe Green to forays into EV financing ▪️ Namma Yatri launches ride-hailing services in Bengaluru [Financial results this week] ▪️ LoadShare’s scale remains flat in FY23, losses shrink 19% ▪️ Heads Up For Tails posts flat scale in FY23; losses mount 5X ▪️ InMobi’s Glance records 77% growth in FY23; losses cross Rs 1,000 Cr ▪️ Otipy posts 50% GMV growth in FY24; losses down by 21% [News flash this week] ▪️ KreditBee plans ‘Ghar Wapsi’ from Singapore to India ▪️ Baron and Invesco mark up Pine Labs’ valuation ▪️ Jio-BlackRock JV to enter wealth management, stock broking biz ▪️ Swiggy merges Mall offering with Instamart ▪️ RBI’s draft KYC guidelines add burden and cost for payment aggregators ▪️ Bhavish Aggarwal plans $500 Mn IPO for Ola Cabs [Conclusion] After a significant drop in funding, the weekly funding again rose nearly 3X this week. The week saw three fund launches namely WTFund, Caret Capital, BizDateUp, and Inviga Healthcare Fund. The week also witnessed a layoff as The Good Glamm Group fired a part of its workforce. Fintech company KreditBee is relocating its domicile from Singapore to India, following a trend among new-age firms like Pine Labs, Groww, Razorpay, Meesho, and Zepto. US-based investment firms Baron Funds and Invesco have marked up the valuation of fintech unicorn Pine Labs, with Baron valuing it at $5.8 billion and Invesco at $4.8 billion as of December 2023. In another development, Swiggy is integrating Swiggy Mall with its quick commerce offering, Instamart, to expand its product range. Additionally, after postponing its IPO plans in 2021, Ola Cabs is preparing for a $500 million IPO at a valuation of around $5 billion, and reportedly planning to file draft papers with SEBI within three months.

Funding and acquisitions in Indian startups this week [22-27 Apr]

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Funding and acquisitions in Indian startups this week [22-27 Apr]
Medial

During the week, as many as 27 Indian startups raised nearly $222.7 million in funding. These deals include 7 growth-stage deals and 17 early-stage deals. Meanwhile, three early-stage startups did not disclose the amount raised. Last week, about 37 early and growth-stage startups collectively raised around $310 million in capital. [Growth-stage deals] Among the growth-stage deals, 7 startups raised $150.6 million in funding this week. Financial services firm Northern Arc led the list with $80 million in funding. The list was followed by network-as-a-service provider CloudExtel, trucking aggregator for enterprises LetsTransport, online marketplace for financial products BankBazaar, provider of business, property, and school financing Clix Capital, agri-fintech platform Samunnati, and co-working space provider Smartworks which raised $24 million, $22 million, $9.6 million, $6 million, $5 million, and $4 million, respectively. [Early-stage deals] Subsequently, 17 early-stage startups scooped funding worth $72.08 million during the week. Omni-channel fashion brand Lyskraft spearheaded the list followed by space-tech startup Dhruva Space, real estate and infra decarbonization platform Accacia, B2C credit management firm CheQ, and an open-source project management platform Plane. The list further includes a provider of Solar EPC solutions Soleos Solar Energy, healthcare and insurtech firm FlashAid, elder care startup bubble tea and other food items platform Boba Bhai, sustainable container logistics and supply chain optimization startup MatchLog, and SIM-based outbound call management company Runo among others. The list of early-stage startups also includes three startups that kept the funding amount undisclosed: FlexiCloud, Nikitek (GoDigiTag), and Rentomojo. [City and segment-wise deals] In terms of the city-wise number of funding deals, Bengaluru-based startups led with 10 deals followed by Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Chennai, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, and others. Segment-wise, fintech startups grabbed the top spot with five deals followed by SaaS startups. The list further counts e-commerce, logistics, proptech, healthtech, and AI startups among others. The complete breakdown of deals across cities and segments can be seen below: [Series-wise deals] During the week, Seed funding deals led the list with 11 deals while Pre-Series A deals are at the second position with 6 deals, both collectively forming around 30% of the total funding. Further, Debt, Series C, Series D, and Series E are next on the list among others. [Week-on-week funding trend] On a weekly basis, startup funding declined 28% to $222.7 million as compared to around $310 million raised during the previous week. The average funding in the last eight weeks stands at around $247 million with 26 deals per week. [Departure] Piyush Gupta, the managing director of Peak XV Partners, is set to depart from the firm by the end of this month. Reports suggest that Gupta is planning to establish a secondary-focused fund after his tenure at Peak XV. [Fund launches] Three startup-focused funds were launched this week. Norwest Venture Partners has raised $3 billion for its new fund, NVP 17, which will be deployed in the US, India, and Israel. Lighthouse Canton has launched the LC GenInnov Global Innovation Fund, focusing on companies in generative artificial intelligence (GenAI). Kedaara Capital has closed its fourth investment vehicle, Kedaara IV, at $1.73 billion, making it their fourth fund in 12 years, raised in just four months. [Layoffs] SaaS startup HealthPlix laid off 100 employees, constituting 25% of its workforce, as part of a restructuring and annual performance review. According to a report, approximately 60 employees were terminated due to poor performance, while the rest were affected by role redundancies. [Mergers & Acquisitions] Awign, a work-as-a-service platform, announced the acquisition of a majority stake in Mynavi Corporation. As part of this partnership, some of Awign’s early backers, such as Capria, Lumis, MSDF, Amicus Capital, and Pankaj Bansal, will also depart. [New launches] ▪️ Former BharatPe CPO Ankur Jain to launch new startup Jivi.ai ▪️ BharatPe launches all-in-one payment device BharatPe One [Financial results this week] ▪️ Lenskart is EBITDA profitable with Rs 3,788 Cr revenue in FY23 ▪️ Third Wave Coffee’s scale grows 4.5X to Rs 144 Cr in FY23 ▪️ Groyyo’s gross revenue nears Rs 500 Cr in FY23 ▪️ FarEye spent Rs 361 Cr to earn Rs 139 Cr in FY23 ▪️ Seven-year-old unicorn Open struggles to match deeds to reputation ▪️ Apna Mart, the D Mart for India’s smaller cities, grows 770% in FY23 [News flash this week] ▪️ FirstCry to withdraw IPO papers, may refile with latest financials: Report ▪️ Swiggy gets shareholders’ nod to float $1.25 Bn IPO ▪️ PayU to onboard new merchants as it gets a PA license from RBI ▪️ Awfis, TBO receive a final nod from SEBI for the IPO ▪️ Flipkart Ventures to focus on Gen AI startups in third accelerator program ▪️ Former BharatPe CEO Suhail Sameer floats VC fund ▪️ RBI directs TalkCharge to cease operation ▪️ Zomato piloting priority deliveries in Bengaluru, Mumbai [Conclusion] After a significant rise in funding, the weekly funding again slipped nearly 28% this week. The week saw three new fund launches by VC firms namely Lighthouse Canton, Norwest Venture Partners, and Kedaara Capital. The week also witnessed a layoff as SaaS startup HealthPlix fired a part of its workforce. Brainbees Solutions, the parent company of FirstCry, is reportedly withdrawing its $500 million IPO due to questions raised by SEBI over key disclosed metrics. Swiggy has received shareholders’ approval for its $1.25 billion IPO, moving closer to its public listing. Awfis and TBO have also received SEBI’s approval for their respective IPOs. PayU has received provisional approval from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) to function as a payment aggregator, enabling the fintech company to onboard new merchants. In January 2023, the RBI instructed PayU, controlled by Prosus, to reapply for the license, leading to a temporary halt in onboarding new customers. Foodtech company Zomato is testing a new feature in select areas of Bengaluru and Mumbai, offering priority deliveries to customers for an extra fee. In Bengaluru, users were given the choice of receiving their orders within 16-21 minutes by paying an additional Rs 29, compared to the standard delivery time of 21 minutes displayed on the app.

Indian startups raised $1.3 Bn in May, highest funding in 2024 so far

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Indian startups raised $1.3 Bn in May, highest funding in 2024 so far
Medial

Investments in Indian startups reached a new height in May as the total funding influx crossed the $1.3 billion threshold. The surge can be attributed to Google-Flipkart’s $350 million deal, a couple of $100 million plus rounds, and several growth stage fundings. Indian startups mopped up $1.34 billion across 128 deals in May, according to data compiled by startup data intelligence platform TheKredible. This included 39 growth-stage deals worth $1.19 billion and 66 early-stage deals amounting to $154 million. There were 23 undisclosed rounds, primarily early-stage deals. The Indian startup ecosystem produced its last unicorn in March with Perfios entering the coveted club. Moreover, the total number of new unicorns in the ongoing calendar year stood at two with Bhavish Aggawal-led AI startup Krutrim being the first one. [Month-on-Month and Year-on-Year trend] The funding in May saw a nearly 29% month-on-month jump from a little over $1 billion in April. On a year-on-year basis, May 2024 also saw a 32% jump from $1.01 billion in May 2023. Since January, homegrown startups have raised over $5.1 billion which is likely to reach $12 billion by the year end. In 2023, the total funding in startups stood at $11.3 billion. [Top growth stage deals] E-commerce marketplace Flipkart raised $350 million in equity funding from Google and stood at the top followed by SaaS firm Atlan’s $105 million Series C round and healthtech startup NephroPlus’s $102 million Series F round. D2C performance wear brand TechnoSport and fast fashion brand Libas raised their maiden fundraise (Series A) worth $21 million and $18 million, respectively. However, both brands are more than a decade old and they are included in growth/late-stage deals. The top 10 list also includes NBFC startup Annapurna Finance, B2B e-commerce unicorn Infra.Market, EV startups Battery Smart, GreenCell Mobility, and Ather Energy, edtech firm K12 Techno, and fintech company Propelld. [Top early-stage deals] Agritech startup Superplum which raised $15 million in Series A was on top among early-stage deals followed by UnifyApps which scooped up $11 million in seed funding. Soleos Solar Energy, Vegapay, Turno, DiFacto, Celcius Logistics, Flam, CoverSure, and Fyllo made it to the top 10 list of early-stage deals. [City and segment-wise deals] City-wise, Bengaluru-based startups remained on the top with 52 deals, contributing around 60% of the overall funding in May. Delhi-NCR and Mumbai followed with 33 and 14 deals, respectively. The list further counts Hyderabad, Chennai, Ahmedabad, and Kolkata, among others. Segment-wise, e-commerce startups (including D2C brands) led the show followed by fintech with 25 and 20 deals, respectively. SaaS, agritech, and healthtech were next on the list. Visit TheKredible for more details. [Stage-wise deals] Series-wise, 47 startups raised funding in the Seed and pre-seed round followed by 19 Series A deals, 19 Pre-Series A, and 11 Series B deals. Debt-only funding contributed $155 million or 11.6% of the overall venture funding across deals. [Mergers and acquisitions] Indian startups saw eight mergers and acquisitions in May, a slight slump from nearly a dozen deals in April. While most of the deals were undisclosed, the acquisition of Device42 by Freshworks in a $230 million deal stayed on top of the list. UGRO Capital took over MyShubhLife in a $5.3 million deal. The notable list of M&A also includes the acquisition of LogiTax by Cashflo, SocialBoat by Noise, CosmoGenesis Labs by MamaEarth, and Zenifi by BharatX. [Layoffs and top-level exits] Unlike the past couple of months, there was a sharp fall in layoffs in May. Edtech company PrepLadder and fintech startup Simpl fired 145 and 100 employees, respectively. In April, nearly 1,500 employees were laid off. However, the recent trend of AI implementation is likely to drive mass firings in the upcoming months. As per media reports, Paytm and Ola Electric may join the list with mass firings. The top-level departures continued in May as a couple of CEOs including Freshworks’ Girish Mathrubootham and Caasha’s Kumar Gaurav left their post in the last month. The list also includes CFO, and CBO, among others. [ESOP buyback] April saw two employees’ stock (ESOP) buybacks against three in April and four in March. Home service marketplace Urban Company announced its fifth and highest ESOP buyback of 2024 worth $24.4 million. In March, Meesho announced a stock buyback program worth $24 million. Visit TheKredible to see series-wise deals along with amount breakup, complete details of fund launches, and more insights. [Conclusion] The strong revival in May might be attributed to a few large deals, but even these no doubt signal confidence in the market for many other investors, and serve as a good indicator of future direction in the market. Add to that possible delays from investors waiting for the election circus to be over, and it is safe to say, despite headwinds, the Indian startup ecosystem will look forward to a much better funds flow in the coming months.

Indian startups show sign of recovery with $7 Bn funding in H1 2024

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Indian startups show sign of recovery with $7 Bn funding in H1 2024
Medial

The Indian startup ecosystem is going through a recovery phase: there have been larger funding rounds, an increase in the number of deals, a surge in secondary deals and ESOP buybacks, and a decline in layoffs. As per data compiled by TheKredible, Indian startups raised nearly $7 billion in funding during the first half of 2024. This is more than the $5.92 billion raised in H1 2023. But it’s also far less than $20 billion in H1 2022 which now seems like the golden phase for startups, at least in terms of venture capital inflow. The $7 billion funding consisted of 182 growth or late stage deals worth $5.4 billion and 404 early-stage deals worth $1.54 billion. Meanwhile, 99 were undisclosed deals. During the first half, Indian startups produced a couple of unicorns: Perfios and Krutrim SI Designs. In 2023, only two startups managed to go past the unicorn valuation while 2022 and 2021 saw the emergence of 26 and 44 unicorns, respectively. [Y-o-Y and M-o-M trend] As mentioned above, there is a significant increase in the number of startup deals and funding in H1 2024 from $5.92 billion in H1 2023. If we see the last four consecutive half yearly data, H1 2024 stands at the top in terms of total amount raised. The growth can be attributed to a bunch of $100 million plus rounds and mega deals bagged by late stage firms such as Zepto, Flipkart, PharmEasy and Lenskart. When it comes to month-on-month trends, June saw nearly $2 billion in funding which is more than double of the average of $1 billion monthly funding until May this year. [Top 10 growth stage deals in H1] Late stage companies such as Zepto, Flipkart, PharmEasy and Lenskart were on the top with $665 million, $350 million, $216 million, and $200 million funding, respectively. Lenskart’s $200 million funding was a pure secondary transaction play whereas Zepto may have also had some secondary component in the last funding round. Overall, all startups in the top 10 list have raised more than $100 million each during the first six months of 2024. The list includes Engrail, Atlan, Pocket FM, Nephroplus, SEDEMAC and Shadowfax. [Top 10 early stage deals in H1] Invite-only networking platform SCOPE led the funding chart for early stage startups with $90 million funding. This was followed by AI startup Krutrim, blockchain startup Avail, e-commerce startup Indkal and battery tech startup IBC. Lyskraft, Ema, StockGro, Hunch and Rozana also made it to the top 10 list of early stage deals. Notably, more than 30 early stage startups have raised over $10 million each during H1 2024. [Mergers and Acquisitions] The first half of 2024 saw 55 mergers and acquisitions, which is lower when compared to the previous years. The year 2021 saw more than 250 mergers and acquisitions which declined to 204 in 2022 and further reduced to 145 in 2023. Even if we double the number of M&A, it will hover around 100 in total by the end of 2024. There were stress deals during the period which included the acquisition of ZestMoney by DMI Group, MX Player by Amazon, Kuvera by CRED, Spartan Poker by OneVerse, and ET Money by 360 One (formerly IIFL Wealth). Check the list for more details: [City and segment wise deals] Bengaluru, once again topped the list with 253 startups from the city having raised more than $2.83 billion in funding during 2023. This accounted for 40% of the total funding. Delhi-NCR-based startups followed with 164 deals amounting to $1.3 billion. Mumbai, Hyderabad and Pune made it to the top five list. Notably, Mumbai-based startups contributed to nearly 22% of the total funding whereas Delhi NCR-based startups accounted for 18.76% of the overall fund inflow. Segment wise, e-commerce was at the top with 124 startups raising over $1.87 billion. Fintech, healthtech, SaaS and EV startups were next on the list. Amount wise, EV startups raised more money than SaaS and healthtech. Agritech, foodtech, edtech and proptech saw their downfall during the first half of 2024. [Stage wise deals] In H1 2024, seed and pre-seed stage startups saw 266 deals amounting to more than $457 million. Series A and pre Series A saw 134 and 80 deals, respectively. There were 58 debt funding worth $784 million and 5 pre-IPO rounds worth nearly $250 million. Check TheKredible for more details. [Layoffs, shutdowns and departures] Layoffs, shutdowns and departures continued even in 2024. However, there was a sharp decline when compared with the previous years. For context, Indian startups saw 3,300 people being laid off during H1 2024 which is roughly one-third of the over 9,000 in H2 2023 and 15,000 in H1 2023. Byju’s, ReshaMandi, Swiggy, Ola, Cult.fit, Healthifyme, Scaler and PrepLadder topped in terms of laying off employees during the first half. During the first quarter of 2024, five companies shut their operations. The list includes Resso, Rario, OKX India, GoldPe, and Muvin. Rario added that it will launch a brand new platform that will enable users to play new and engaging cricket-based games. However, only one startup announced its shutdown during the second quarter taking the overall shutdown to six in H1. In 2023, more than 15 startups shut their operations. High profile departures were a big concern during the first half of 2024. As per data compiled by TheKredible, 45 top level executives left their posts. These include co-founders, CEOs, CFO, CBO, COO, and managing directors, among others. [Comparison] For a better understanding of startup funding, we have created a comparison graph for the first and second quarter of the year which showed that the number of deals and total funding saw an uptick in Q2 when compared to Q1. [Trends in H1 2024] Surge in generative AI and spiritual tech deals: Overall, AI startups saw 27 deals amounting to $237 million. Generative AI startups grabbed a significant portion of the total funding. In the past six months, these startups have managed to mope up nearly $100 million. The list includes Sarvam AI, Ema, Neysa, Vodex, and KonProz, among others. Spiritual tech startups also saw an uptick in the number of deals. In the ongoing calendar year, such startups have raised more than $36 million and some new rounds are in the pipeline. Maiden funding for established fashion brands: During H1, a clutch of fashion and apparel brands raised their maiden institutional round. In May, A91 Partners led a $21 million round in TechnoSport whereas Libas raised $18 million led by ICICI Venture’s fund. Recently, Rare Rabbit raised $18 million in primary capital led by A91 Partners. The round is expected to close at around $50 million. ESOP and secondary deals: More than 10 startups announced their ESOP buyback program worth nearly $58 million in H1 2024. While the majority of them did not disclose the amount, Meesho, Urban Company and Pocket FM announced their largest ESOP buyback program. Similarly, secondary transactions have also increased during the first six months. Some of the biggest beneficiaries of secondary transactions are Lenskart, Meesho, Shadowfax, Fibe, Wow! Momo, Porter, among others. Startup IPOs on the rise: In the ongoing calendar year, TBO tech, Digit Insurance, Awfis and Ixigo have been listed on the stock exchanges while Unicommerce, FirstCry and Ola Electric got final approval from SEBI and Mobikwik, Swiggy and Avanse have been waiting for approval from the market regulator. Overall, 2024 appears to have better prospects for startups in the public market. In 2021, more than 10 startups listed on stock exchanges. This number plummeted in 2022 (two IPOs) and 2023 (five IPOs). Moreover, a bunch of companies are assessing the right time to launch their IPO, Zepto, Flipkart, PharmEasy, The Good Glamm Group, and others may announce their exact IPO timeline anytime soon. Debt deals: Besides increase in equity and secondary deals, debt deals also contributed a significant portion in H1. As per data, H1 2024 saw 57 debt only deals amounting to $784 million. There were several deals which included equity as well as debt components. However, we couldn’t ascertain the actual breakdown of such deals which may push the overall debt to more than $1 billion in the said period. [Conclusion] While the peaks of H1 2022 might take some time to be reached and crossed again, considering the typical cycle of at least 3-5 years for such funding peaks, things are certainly improving fast. While stability in government helps, it is the booming stock markets that will drive funding for startups too, as investors cash out gains and redeploy from successful IPOs or broader market gains. Ironically, many firms that could barely get VC or PE funding have managed IPOs in recent weeks, further underscoring the case for a correction in the stock markets or a diffusion of the bullishness to startup funding as well. But while the markets will continue to value revenues and some profitability ideally, the real job of backing ideas and innovations will also benefit as multiple VCs, family offices and other investors return to the startup funding market to seed the next crop of startups.

Funding and acquisitions in Indian startups this week [5 - 10 Feb]

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Funding and acquisitions in Indian startups this week [5 - 10 Feb]
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Funding infusion in the startup ecosystem surged 2.4x this week compared to the previous seven days. Of 39 startups which scooped up $240 million cumulatively this week, 29 deals belonged to the early stage startups. Remaining eight deals went to growth stage startups. Two startups did not disclose the amount it raised. Last week, 13 early and growth stage startups collectively raised around $84.5 million, including two undisclosed deals. [Growth-stage deals] This week, eight growth startups raised nearly $140 million funding. Electric vehicle manufacturer River spearheaded the lot with $40 million fundraise followed by real estate consultancy firm Anarock and clean energy firm Lohum which raised $24 million and $23 million B funding, respectively. E-commerce roll-up firm GlobalBees and electric vehicle financing platform Mufin Green Finance also raised notable funding to make it to the top five deals. Agritech startup BigHaat, vernacular news aggregator DailyHunt’s parent Verse Innovation and D2C apparel brand Bombay Shirt Company also raised capital this week. [Early-stage deals] Among the early-stage startups, 29 startups secured funding worth $100 million. Smart home automation firm Keus is on top of the list with a $12 million fundraise followed by two-wheeler electric vehicle finance platform OTO, biotechnology startup Pandorum, creator-focused commerce startup Wishlink and office space provider DevX. The list further includes SaaS startup Attentive, EV firm Vidyut, cleantech company Metafin, healthtech entity Khyaal and home appliance firm Upliance.ai. During the week, the manufacturer of reusable rockets that bring both the stages of the rocket back into earth, EtherealX and digital infrastructure innovations startup PlanckDOT also raised capital but did not disclose the funding amount. For more information, visit TheKredible. [City and segment-wise deals] In terms of city-wise number of funding deals, Bengaluru-based startups again led the list with 12 deals. This was followed by Mumbai, Delhi-NCR, and Chennai. Pune, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Kolkata, Vadodara, Navi Mumbai and Thane are next on the list. The complete breakdown of the city and segment can be found at TheKredible. [Series wise deals] This week, equivalent to 17 startups raised funding in their seed round followed by Series A (11) and Series B (4) deals. The list also counts debt, pre-Series A, Series C and pre-Series C funding deals. [Week-on-week funding trend] On a weekly basis, startup funding soared 184% to $240 million as compared to $84.5 million in the previous week. The average funding in the last eight weeks stands around $251 million with 24 deals per week. [Departures] The week also saw a few notable departures. Ather Energy’s CFO Deepak Jain is departing the company, with Sohil Parekh taking over his role. Swiggy’s independent director Mallika Srinivasan has resigned after a year, and Freshworks’ CRO Pradeep Rathinam is stepping down after almost four years, to be succeeded by Abe Smith as the new global field operations leader. Shinjini Kumar and Manju Agarwal have reportedly quit Paytm’s payments bank board. [Fund launches] Cactus Venture Partners (CVP) closed its first fund at over Rs 630 crore, while GrowthCap Ventures, led by former BharatPe executive Pratekk Agarwaal, has reached the first close of its debut fund at Rs 20 crore. Additionally, Orient Growth Ventures has closed its second fund for India and Southeast Asia (SEA) at $90 million. [Layoffs/Shutdown] This week, Licious and Blissclub laid off a part of their workforce, affecting 3% and 18% of employees respectively. Meanwhile, Muvin shut down operations due to RBI regulations on UPI co-branding. [Merger & Acquisition] The week also witnessed six M&A deals including the acquisition of Spartan Poker by OneVerse, Kuvera by CRED, LotusPay by Juspay, and Qdigi Services by Onesitego. Healthtech firm Thyrocare and logistics firm Deliver.sg also joined the list with the acquisitions of Think Health Diagnostics and BusyBee, respectively. Visit TheKredible to see series wise deals and amount breakup, complete details of fund launches, departures and more insights. [New launches] ▪️ Cleartrip launches Out of Office to foray into the corporate travel space ▪️ Meesho launches logistics marketplace Valmo ▪️ Flipkart introduces 3-hour fresh flower delivery service [Financial results this week] ▪️ Leverage Edu revenue spikes 3.2X to Rs 69 Cr in FY23 ▪️ Infra.Market posts Rs 11,846 Cr gross revenue in FY23; remains profitable ▪️ FabHotels reports Rs 219 Cr revenue and Rs 5 Cr loss in FY23 ▪️ Chingari crosses Rs 100 Cr revenue in FY23; losses decline 70% ▪️ Hike’s revenue soars 8X to Rs 150 Cr in FY23; losses up 24% ▪️ Zomato posts Rs 3,288 Cr revenue and Rs 138 Cr profit in Q3 FY24 [News flash this week] ▪️ Vanguard marks down Ola’s valuation to $1.88 Bn ▪️ Zoho, Juspay, Decentro get RBI nod for payment aggregator biz ▪️ Orios Venture gets 45X returns in a partial exit from Country Delight [Entrackr’s analysis] Evident from the numbers, weekly funding has made a strong comeback with investments worth nearly $240 million. The back-to-back startup focused fund announcements also hint at the optimism in the Indian startup ecosystem. Continuous layoffs and business closures, however, give a hard reality check to the sector, which is trying to recover from the so-called funding winter. US-based asset management company Vanguard has marked down Ola’s valuation, pegging it at less than $2 billion. This marks the third consecutive devaluation of Ola by Vanguard since February 2023. Meanwhile, several prominent players have secured payment aggregator licenses from the central bank. This includes SaaS unicorn Zoho and fintech firms Juspay and Decentro. Additionally, early-stage venture capital firm Orios Venture Partners took a partial exit from dairy startup Country Delight with a 45X return on the firm’s initial investment. In a positive development, publicly traded companies such as Zomato, MamaEarth, and Nykaa have persistently remained in green, indicating their steady progress towards evolving into sustainable enterprises.

Funding and acquisitions in Indian startups this week [12 - 17 Feb]

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Funding and acquisitions in Indian startups this week [12 - 17 Feb]
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This week as many as 27 Indian startups raised funding amounting to nearly $162 million. These deals consist of five growth stage deals and 22 early stage deals. The early stage deals also include four startups which kept their transaction details undisclosed. Last week, 39 early and growth stage startups collectively raised around $240 million, including two undisclosed deals. [Growth-stage deals] Among the growth stage deals, five startups raised $74.2 million capital this week. B2B animal protein marketplace led the pack with $25 million funding followed by global student housing solution provider Amber and pet care product marketplace Supertails which raised $21 million and $15 million, respectively. Further, MSMEs-focused fintech lender FlexiLoans and electric vehicle manufacturing startup Tork Motors also scooped funding this week. [Early-stage deals] Equivalent to 18 early-stage startups secured funding worth $87.66 million during the week. Spiritual tech platform Astrotalk spearheaded the chart followed by metals supply chain company Metalbook, mobility fintech firm Moove, risk-focused compliance automation platform Scrut Automation and agrifood fintech platform Ayekart. The list further includes EV financing firm Ascend Capital, rewards-focused internet browser Veera, and travel-focussed social media platform Explurger among others. During the week, consumer medical startup Arcatron Mobility, digital banking platform Freo, D2C haircare brand iluvia and D2C ice-cream brand Frubon also raised capital but did not disclose the funding amount. For more information, visit TheKredible. [City and segment-wise deals] In terms of city-wise number of funding deals, Bengaluru-based startups again led the list with eight deals. This was followed by Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Pune and Jaipur. The complete breakdown of the city and segment can be found at TheKredible. [Series wise deals] This week, around 14 startups raised funding in their Series A round followed by debt (5) and Pre-seed (3) deals. The list further includes Series B, Seed, and Series C funding deals. [Week-on-week funding trend] On a weekly basis, startup funding declined 32.5% to $162 million this week as compared to $240 million in the previous week. The average funding in the last eight weeks stands around $152 million with 23 deals per week. [ESOP buyback] Edtech company Classplus announced employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) buyback for more than 150 employees. This is the second buyback announcement by the company in the last three years. [Fund launches] The week witnessed four fund launches: Hyderabad Angles Fund (HAF) announced its maiden venture capital fund with a corpus of Rs 100 crore, Endiya Partners is set to launch its third fund between Rs 800 crore and Rs 1,000 crore, PedalStart announced a $250,000 Series-2 fund for early-stage startups, and InCred Alternatives Investments launched its maiden Category II AIF in private equity. [Layoffs/Shutdown] Fintech startup Wint Wealth reportedly fired around 20% of its workforce in an internal restructuring exercise impacting employees across departments, including marketing, sales, and tech. [Merger & Acquisition] Nazara Technologies’ subsidiary Nodwin Gaming International Pte Ltd is set to acquire e-sports and gaming company Ninja Global FZCO for $3.5 million. The move aims to bolster Nodwin Gaming’s presence in Turkey and the Middle East. The transaction will be conducted using a combination of cash and stock. Visit TheKredible to see series wise deals and amount breakup, complete details of fund launches, and more insights. [New launches] ▪️ Unacademy to launch language learning app ▪️ Flathead founder launches a new venture, Aurm [Financial results this week] ▪️ With over 2X growth, Miko’s revenue crosses Rs 225 Cr in FY23 ▪️ Yatra churns profits in Q3 FY24, revenue crosses Rs 110 Cr ▪️ Bloom Hotels turns profitable with Rs 144 Cr revenue in FY23 ▪️ Smartworks crosses Rs 700 Cr revenue in FY23; losses up 44% ▪️ Zoomcar’s scale shrinks 19% in Q3 FY24, improves bottom line [News flash this week] ▪️ RBI asks Visa, Mastercard to suspend card-based commercial payments ▪️ NCLT accepts insolvency plea against Dream 11-parent over 7.6 Cr default ▪️ Ixigo and Ullu Digital next in line to go public, file DRHP [Entrackr’s analysis] After a nearly three-fold surge in funding last week, the weekly funding again shrank over 30% to $162 million this week. The week also witnessed the launch of four startup focused funds: Hyderabad Angels Fund, Endiya Partners, PedalStart and InCred. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has directed Visa and Mastercard to cease card-based commercial payments, impacting fintech companies such as Enkash, and Paymate, which facilitate these transactions. Additionally, the NCLT has accepted an insolvency plea against Dream11, citing a rent default exceeding Rs 7.6 crore. Regarding the recent developments with Paytm Payments Bank Limited (PPBL), the RBI has provided temporary relaxations for affected customers. They can make deposits, credit transactions, or top-ups in their accounts until March 15, 2024, instead of the earlier deadline of February 29, 2024. However, the nodal accounts of One97 Communications Ltd and Paytm Payments Services Ltd maintained by PPBL are to be terminated by February 29, 2024. Customers are allowed to withdraw or utilize their balances without any restrictions. In response, Paytm has shifted its nodal account to Axis Bank for merchant settlements. RBI deputy governor clarified that the crackdown on Paytm’s payments bank followed conversations and warnings. As a result, Paytm’s shares have plummeted to an all-time low. Additionally, ixigo and Ullu Digital have filed their Draft Red Herring Prospectus (DRHP) this week, signaling their intentions to go public soon.

Layoffs, departures continue as Indian startups raise $1 Bn in April: Report

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Layoffs, departures continue as Indian startups raise $1 Bn in April: Report
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The year 2024 started on a good note for Indian startups: an average of $1 billion in monthly funding, which is a significant growth when compared to the previous year during which monthly funding went below $500 million three times. In April 2024, however, startups crossed the $1 billion threshold on the back of a couple of pre-IPO funding, a few late-stage rounds, and debt deals. Indian startups raked in more than $1 billion across 124 deals in April, according to data compiled by startup data intelligence platform TheKredible. This included 36 growth-stage deals worth $813 million and 65 early-stage deals amounting to $225.75 million. Moreover, there were 23 undisclosed rounds, primarily early-stage deals. During the recent Startup Mahakumbh festival, Peak XV Partners’ managing director Rajan Anandan said that Indian startups are expected to raise $8 billion to $12 billion this year. He also added that around $20 billion of private capital is lying uninvested and is committed to investment in private firms and startups in India. This estimate appears close considering the current rate of monthly funding. [Month-on-Month and Year-on-Year trend] In April 2024, there was a 14% year-on-year jump in funding from $912 million in the same month last year. Even on a monthly basis, April almost matched March’s $1.18 billion funding. Interestingly, only one startup i.e. PharmEasy managed to raise funding in three digits during the last month. Since January, homegrown startups have raised close to $4 billion, and at this rate, it may cross the $11 billion funding raised in 2023. [Top growth stage deals] Healthcare startup PharmEasy’s $216 million pre-IPO round stood at the top, though its valuation dropped nearly 90% from $5.6 billion to $710 million during the latest fundraise. Financial services firm Northern Arc also announced its $80 million Series C round while Ola Electric raised $50 million in debt even after filing draft IPO papers. Altum Credo, ProcMart, SingleInterface, Infinity Fincorp, CloudExtel, and LetsTransport also featured in the top 10 growth stage deals in April. [Top early-stage deals] Omnichannel fashion startup Lyskraft, founded by Zomato’s co-founder Mohit Gupta and Myntra and Cultfit’s co-founder Mukesh Bansal, scooped up $26 million in a seed funding round and was on the top of the list in early-stage deals in April. Gen AI startup Neysa bagged $20 million whereas spacetech company Dhruva Space and edtech firm Emversity (Beyond Odds) raised $15 million and $11 million, respectively. The rest of the early-stage startups in the top 10 list raised less than $10 million each. The list includes Traya, LightFury Games, GTM Buddy, FincFriends, and Accacia. [City and segment-wise deals] City-wise, expectedly, Bengaluru-based startups are on top with 42 deals, contributing around 26% of the overall funding in April. Delhi-NCR and Mumbai followed with 30 and 26 deals, respectively. However, Mumbai-based startups topped the list in terms of the total amount raised. The list further counts Kolkata, Hyderabad, Pune, and Ahmedabad among others. Segment-wise, e-commerce startups (including D2C brands) and fintech startups co-led the list with 19 deals each followed by healthtech (16), SaaS (15), EV (5), automotive tech (4), and foodtech (4) startups among others. Visit TheKredible for more details. [Stage-wise deals] Series-wise, 44 startups raised funding in the Seed round followed by 20 Series A deals, 13 Pre-Series A, 11 Series B deals, and 7 Pre-Seed deals. As many as 14 startups raised debt funding worth $199.2 million during the period. [Mergers and acquisitions] Indian startups saw nearly a dozen mergers and acquisitions in April of which most deals were undisclosed. Among the disclosed deals, National Investment and Infrastructure Fund (NIIF) acquired a majority stake in digital infrastructure solutions company iBUS for about $200 million. US-based Aurionpro Solutions also acquired Indian fintech company Arya.ai for $16.5 million. The notable list of M&A also includes the acquisition of Shy Tiger brands by Ghost Kitchens India, Orbit by Postman, Awign by MyNavi, and Magzter by Dailyhunt’s parent company VerSe Innovations. [Layoffs, top-level exits, and shutdown/s] The mass firing in startups continued in April as they laid off nearly 1,500 employees during the month. April surpassed the cumulative layoffs of 1,100 employees during the first quarter of 2024. Troubled edtech company Byju’s remained on top with 500 layoffs, followed by The Good Glamm Group, Healthify, and Scaler with 150 layoffs each. Check the full list here. April also saw high-profile exits from startups including five chief executives. Sujot Malhotra, CEO of Beardo, Surinder Chawla, CEO of Paytm Payments Bank, Arjun Mohan, CEO of Byju’s India, Sukhleen Aneja, CEO of The Good Glamm Group’s D2C Brands Division and Hemanth Bakshi, CEO of Ola Cabs, have quit this month. Besides layoffs and departures, Nintee, a digital health startup launched by Wingify founder Paras Chopra, announced shutting down its operations after a year of launch. During the first three months of 2024, six startups announced their shutting down operations in India. [ESOP buyback] Employees’ stock buyback also continued in April as three growth-stage companies – Pocket FM, XYXX, and The Sleep Company – announced their ESOP buyback program last month. Pocket FM bought back $8.3 million worth of stocks from employees while the rest two did not disclose the transaction details. The March quarter saw four ESOP buybacks including MyGate, Meesho, Classplus, and Imagekit. Visit TheKredible to see series-wise deals along with amount breakup, complete details of fund launches, and more insights. [Conclusion] While the trajectory of fund raising is positive, its quality might worry some, as it has gone to a firm that was clearly in distress and at a massive haircut (PharmEasy), besides the large, lumpy deal from NIIF. It might also be time to relook debt funding numbers as part of overall startup funding figures, as debt is usually taken by startups that are running operations sustainably from a financial perspective, or where founders do not want to dilute stakes any more. So it’s not quite the risk capital that equity funding is. With a host of IPOs being lined up, we expect the growth trajectory to sustain as pleased investors return to find the next big opportunity.

Funding and acquisitions in Indian startup this week [15 - 20 July]

EntrackrEntrackr · 1y ago
Funding and acquisitions in Indian startup this week [15 - 20 July]
Medial

During the week, as many as 35 Indian startups raised around $261.21 million in funding. These deals count 9 growth-stage deals and 22 early-stage deals while 4 early-stage startups kept their transaction details undisclosed. During the previous week, 22 early and growth-stage startups cumulatively raised more $116.26 million in funding. [Growth-stage deals] Among the growth-stage deals, 9 startups raised $168.63 million in funding this week. Home service marketplace Urban Company spearheaded with its $38 million secondary funding round. Education loan-focused NBFC Auxilo, fintech firm Blacksoil, and EV ride-hailing service provider BluSmart followed with $30 million, $24.8 million, and $24 million in funding, respectively. [Early-stage deals] Further, 22 early-stage startups secured funding worth $92.58 million during the week. gen-z focused fast fashion D2C brand Newme led the list followed by artificial intelligence startup UptimeAI, community-led mobility app Namma Yatri, NBFC Seeds Fincap, and multi-category biscuit manufacturer Nurture Well. Edtech platform focused on engineering education byteXL, EV bus startup FreshBus, and aquatech startup Boon also raised funding among others. For more information, visit TheKredible. [City and segment-wise deals] In terms of the city-wise number of funding deals, Bengaluru-based startups led with 12 deals followed by Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Chennai, and Jaipur among others. Segment-wise, fintech startups grabbed the top spot with nine deals. AI, E-commerce, Healthtech, and Automotive tech startups followed this list among others. [Series-wise deals] During the week, Seed funding deals led the list with 14 deals followed by 6 Series A, 4 debt, 3 pre-Series A deals, and 2 Series B deals. Angel, pre-Seed, pre-Series B, Secondary, Series C, and Series J are next on the list with one deal each. [Week-on-week funding trend] On a weekly basis, startup funding bounced back by nearly 125% to $261.21 million as compared to around $116 million raised during the previous week. The average funding in the last eight weeks stands at around $358 million with 29 deals per week. [Fund launches] PROMAFT Partners, led by industry veterans Raghav Bahl and Soham Avlani, has raised a significant Rs 1,000 crore to invest in startups. Yali Capital, targeting the deeptech space, has also launched a sizeable fund of Rs 810 crore. Additionally, real estate investment firm Altern Capital aims to raise Rs 250 crore through their first fund. Defence startup-focused Jamwant Ventures has secured its first round of funding for their angel fund. Excitel co-founder Vivek Raina’s incubator fund, Launchpad Kashmir, aims to support startups in Jammu & Kashmir. These developments highlight the growing investor interest in the Indian startup ecosystem. [ESOP buyback] In a move to incentivize employees, Swiggy, the food delivery giant, announced a $65 million ESOP liquidity program. This marks its fifth such program since 2018, allowing employees across the company to sell their stock options (ESOPs) in a secondary market. This program follows two consecutive events held in July 2022 and 2023. [Key hirings and departures] In key leadership moves, wealthtech startup Fisdom appointed Girish Venkat to head its wealth management business. Logistics unicorn Delhivery strengthened its operations by bringing Prashant Gazipur on board as a senior vice president. Additionally, Early-stage VC firm Orios Venture Partners bolstered its investment team with Madhav Tandan as a senior partner. In terms of departures, Bengaluru-based startup Simplilearn sees the departure of its chief product officer, Anand Narayanan, after an eight-year stint with the company. Meanwhile, Unacademy, another major edtech player, is experiencing its own leadership shift. Following the co-founder Hemesh Singh’s exit, Jagnoor Singh, COO of Unacademy’s offline centers, is also resigning. [M&A] Nazara Technologies, a gaming and sports media company, has fully acquired Paper Boat Apps, developer of the popular children’s learning app Kiddopia, for a total investment of Rs 300 crore. This follows their initial 50.91% stake acquisition in 2019. Meanwhile, Collective Artists Network, a talent management and influencer marketing firm, has bolstered its creator and content ecosystem by acquiring galleri5, an AI-powered platform, indicating a potential shift towards AI-driven strategies in the creator management space. [Potential deals] Moneyboxx, a lending platform, aims to raise Rs 271 crore ($32.4 Mn) through preferential share issuance and warrants. With the capital infusion, it plans to fuel the growth and expand its reach in rural India, specifically targeting micro-entrepreneurs for financial support. Visit TheKredible to see series-wise deals along with amount breakup, complete details of fund launches, and more insights. [Financial results this week] Paytm reports Rs 1,501.6 Cr revenue and Rs 840 Cr loss in Q1 FY25 Jio Financial Services reports flat growth in Q1 FY25 as interest income declines 43% [News flash this week] Kunal Bahl and Rohit Bansal book 200X return from Urban Company Moneyview set to turn unicorn in Series F round Google Maps cuts prices by 70% for developers after Ola Maps’ free offering Deepinder Goyal enters billionaire club; his holding in Zomato touches $1 Bn Nazara’s subsidiaries receive Rs 1,120 Cr GST notice Creditors may take over Byju’s as NCLT admits insolvency resolution Crypto exchange WazirX hit by cyber attack, $230 Mn stolen Trading app Investmint goes for liquidation process [Conclusion] The weekly funding bounced back by nearly 125% to $261.21 million. This week saw five startup-focused fund launches by VC firms: Promaft Partners, Jamwant Ventures, Alteren Capital, Yali Capital, and Launchpad Kashmir. This week’s startup news offered a mixed bag of stories. We saw some bright spots, like Titan Capital’s impressive returns on their investment in Urban Company and Moneyview’s potential unicorn status. Additionally, Google’s move to make its Maps platform more affordable for Indian developers is a positive step for the tech ecosystem. However, there were also challenges on display. Nazara Technologies’ hefty tax liability and Byju’s insolvency proceedings highlight the financial struggles some startups face. The cyberattack on WazirX raises concerns about security in the cryptocurrency space, while Investmint’s liquidation underscores the competitive nature of the startup landscape. Overall, the week’s news underscores the dynamic nature of the Indian startup scene. While there are opportunities for significant growth and returns, there are also substantial hurdles to overcome.

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