News

Indian VCs Come Together To Form A Startup Funding Trust

Indian VCs Come Together To Form Funding And Advocacy Platform Funder’s Forum For Indian Startups

SUMMARY

These VCs together manage a pool of more than $800 Mn in assets

It will work similarly to existing angel networks such as Indian Angel Network

The group will also be engaging with policymakers, such as the RBI and SEBI

Inc42 Daily Brief

Stay Ahead With Daily News & Analysis on India’s Tech & Startup Economy

A group of Indian early-to-mid-stage domestic venture capital firms (VCs) comprising prominent names such as Kae Capital, YourNest Venture Capital and Stellaris Venture Partners among others have come together to form a startup funding trust and advocacy platform Funder’s Forum. Reportedly, these VCs together manage a pool of more than $800 Mn in assets.

The Funder’s Forum will work similarly to existing angel networks such as Indian Angel Network. The idea is to create a common pool of resources, have a common deal flow thereby be able to write larger ticket size cheques to the companies and lead a funding round collectively, which they are not able to do so in the current structure in many cases.

According to Inc42’s Indian Tech Startup Funding Report 2018, the year 2018 observed a significant drop — 40% in comparison to 2017 — in funding deals in the early stage. From 551 in 2017, the number of deals in the early stage came down to 331 in 2018.

The group of VCs, which competes with foreign investors like Sequoia Capital, Accel Partners among others in India’s fast-growing startup ecosystem, will also be engaging with policymakers, such as the Reserve Bank of India and the Securities and Exchange Board of India.

“India has only two or three domestic institutional LPs, unlike in the west…One of the biggest needs for domestic funds is capital. That becomes paramount. This is an advocacy platform for domestic funds,” Rahul Chowdhri of Stellaris Venture Partners, said in a media statement.

The Need For A Funder’s Forum

At present, the venture capital and private equity industry follow the 2:20 fund structure. Two and twenty (or “2 and 20”) is a fee arrangement that is standard in the hedge fund industry and is also common in venture capital and private equity.

Here “two” means 2% of assets under management (AUM) and refers to the annual management fee charged by the hedge fund for managing assets. Twenty” refers to the standard performance or incentive fee of 20% of profits made by the fund above a certain predefined benchmark.

Mahendra Swarup, founder of Venture Gurukool, and a founding member of Funder’s Forum said in a media report, “Under the 2:20 fund structure, smaller funds aren’t a very viable proposition. The fee structure is so small that it is difficult to hire a good team. The disadvantage is that deal sourcing tends to suffer.”

Further, with India now embracing more than 49K startups (as per DataLabs by Inc42 estimates), the Silicon Valley investors are becoming more prominent in the Indian startup ecosystem. Recently, YCombinator picked record 15 startups from India, which is a large number considering the previous three to four startups selected earlier for its programme from the country.

Also, for the first time, YCombinator hosted interviews for the applicants outside its Mountain View, California headquarters in Bengaluru in March 2019.

Separately, in January this year, Sequoia Capital launched its accelerator programme—Surge-—across India and in South East Asia, in the process, bringing on board former Google India head Rajan Anandan to lead the same. It has now rolled out the applications for the second round of Surge.

Road Ahead

The Funder’s Forum will further look to engage in ensuring better tax treatments for the same.

The reports also suggest that the group will work on ensuring that the current restriction of 35% of a total corpus coming from government organisations be relaxed.

[The development was reported by ET.]

Update 1: June 11, 2019, at 12:33

The earlier version of the story mentioned the name of Chiratae Ventures as part of Funder’s Forum. The VC fund, however, declined to be part of the group in a statement shared with Inc42.

Note: We at Inc42 take our ethics very seriously. More information about it can be found here.

Inc42 Daily Brief

Stay Ahead With Daily News & Analysis on India’s Tech & Startup Economy

Recommended Stories for You