In-Depth

India Not Even Close To Venture Activity In The US, Says Sid Talwar

SUMMARY

Inc42 Datalabs found that startups raised $28.72 Bn across 392 deals in late-stage funding (Series C and later) between 2014-18

Inc42, in its 21st episode of Ask Me Anything (AMA), hosted Siddharth Talwar, co-founder and partner of VC firm Lightbox

Talwar believes that we have a long way to go as we need more Series B, Series C, and late-stage investors

Inc42 Daily Brief

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

Inc42, in its flagship report — The State Of The Indian Startup Ecosystem 2018 — revealed that from 2014 to September 2018, Indian startups raised $38.5 Bn in funding across 3,713 deals.

Further delving into this, Inc42 Datalabs found that of this amount, $28.72 Bn across 392 deals was raised in late-stage funding (Series C and later). In terms of deal value, late-stage funding comprised 34% of the total funding, but the number of deals made up barely 10% of the total funding in the Indian startup ecosystem.

This is the crunch of late-stage funding in India — late-stage investors abound in the US and China, but there’s a dearth of such deals in India.

To put things into perspective, consider this — according to CBInsights, in Q3 2018, US-based startups raised more than $20 Bn in late-stage funding (Series C and later) across 299 deals.

The late-stage deals in the US in just this one quarter made up 76% of the number of late-stage deals and 70% of the value of the late-stage deals in India from 2014-18.

We discussed the problem with Siddharth (Sid) Talwar, co-founder and partner of Venture capital firm Lightbox, during the 21st episode of Ask Me Anything (AMA) by Inc42.

Talwar has been in the startup ecosystem for nearly two decades with hands-on-experience of being an entrepreneur and then an investor, supporting consumer technology startups.

Talwar told us that late-stage investments are picking up in India with many such investors coming in.

However, he believes India has a long way and needs many more Series B, Series C, and other late-stage investors. “It’s been a decade (of the startup ecosystem) in India but, honestly, the real ecosystem has been around in this form (late-stage) for just a few years,” he explained.

Inc42 Datalabs also noted in the report that major Indian startup ecosystem investors who have invested in late-stage deals include Sequoia Capital with 48 deals, Tiger Global Management with 34, Accel Partners with 29 deals, and Matrix Partners with 22 deals, among other investors such as SAIF Partners, Kalaari Capital, SoftBank etc.

Talwar rightly concludes that the US has been doing late-stage deals for 60-70 years now, and in comparison to that, the Indian startup ecosystem is just about 10 years old and has a lot to develop. “We are no were close to scratching the surface of what the venture community needs to develop and become,” said Talwar.

Stay tuned for our next article on Sid’s Ask Me Anything!

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