Early-stage startups are continuing to garner funds, despite venture
capitalists treading with caution, but growth-stage players are finding
it difficult to get the kind of valuations they want.
Morgan Stanley's move to cut the value of its Flipkart holding by over a quarter is a sign of things to come
Across the country, warn ings are being sounded about the coming summer likely to be the hottest one yet. But the ones already feeling the heat are entre preneurs looking to raise millions of dollars to fund their big ideas.
If 2015 was a record year for startups receiving funding, early signs in 2016 point towards a parched year ahead. In the first two months of 2015, 85 deals worth $306 million were closed; the same period in 2016 has witnessed only 48 deals at $121 million.While some analysts describe it as a correction following a spell of wild investing, others say it's time to brace for the drought.
Going by the data, early-stage startups are continuing to garner funds, but those that have already raised significant funds are finding it difficult to raise more at higher valuations. "Early-stage startups with niche models will continue to hold investors' interest. Besides, the funding requirements at that stage are lower as the concept is not proven," says Sanjeev Krishan, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC).
At the other end are large players, particularly in e-commerce, who are well funded, and where the story is different. A mutual fund managed by Morgan Stanley has just cut the value of its Flipkart holding by over a quarter -suggesting that, as far as Morgan Stanley is concerned, Flipkart is now valued at about $11 billion, down from $15.2 billion in its last round.
"After multiple rounds of funding and a lot of `promise investing', investors are looking for actual performance," says Krishan. He points out that in many cases, the same investor or investor groups have put money into multiple platforms in the same segment, and they see benefits in consolidating rather than burning cash.
Performance counts
"Many companies were funded purely with an intention of using capital as a weapon to destroy competition. They will die or find it difficult to raise capital unless they are ready for a massive down round," says Mohan Kumar, executive director, Norwest Venture Partners.
Domestic and international factors have played a role in the squeeze in private equity and venture capital funding in India. The wobbling Chinese economy has cast a cloud over global markets. In the US, tech stocks have taken a beating and investors, such as Bill Gurley of VC firm Benchmark, which invested in Uber and DropBox, have told unicorns to be prepared for leaner times. Back home, volatility in the stock markets and a line of startup failures have added to the gloom. Many food-tech and hyper-local firms that took off with much fanfare and A-list backers are struggling to raise funding past the Series A round.
Food delivery startups, which are capital intensive, have been the worst hit.In October 2015, Bengaluru-based meal delivery startup Dazo -backed by Google India chief Rajan Anandan, Amazon's country manager Amit Agarwal, and others -shut down within a year of its launch after it ran short of capital.
Rocket Internet-backed Foodpanda had raised over $300 million since its launch in March 2012, but by 2015, it was beleaguered with reports of fraud. After a churn in the senior management, 300 people were fired.Its competitors Zomato and TinyOwl together fired more than 500 people in 2015 and have been scaling down. Online restaurant SpoonJoy , which was backed by Flipkart's Sachin Bansal and got $1 million from SAIF Partners, could not sustain operations and was eventually acquired by Grofers.
Startups in the e-commerce space have also found it difficult to hold their ground.Valyoo Tech, which operated a suite of premium e-commerce sites -- Bagskart, Jewelkart, Watchkart and Lenskart -de cided to focus on its best performing asset Lenskart, and shutter the rest.
Prof Thillai Rajan, department of man agement studies, IIT Madras, believes e commerce companies that got sky-high valuations in the second or third round of funding and could not deliver are in trouble "For such startups, the economies of scale are not working out," Rajan says.
Picky investors?
As more people choose the entrepreneuria path and reach out for funds, are investors becoming picky? Not really , says Sanjay Swamy , managing partner, Prime Venture Partners, which invests in very early and early-stage startups. "We look for great en trepreneurs working on huge problems. To hat end, nothing has changed for us -the quality of entrepreneurs and opportunities continue to be on the rise," he says.
Karthik Reddy , managing partner of Blume Ventures, adds that the fundamen als of team, market opportunities and innovation are always the same.
Some investors feel, if it comes, the chill will be welcome as it will separate the men rom the boys and help the right ideas shine hrough. Norwest's Kumar says: "Capital as a barrier is giving way to companies that have good execution, great product and path o profitability . Such companies will get unded and need not worry . This trend is actually very good for entrepreneurs."
Rajan believes very early and earlystage startups need not worry . "The angel network which was absent four to five years ago is strengthening now. Several new investment avenues and platforms are opening up for entrepreneurs who need help converting their ideas into businesses," he says.
Industry veterans like Nandan Nilekani, N R Narayana Murthy, Ratan Tata and T V Mohandas Pai are putting money into the startup ecosystem. Murthy's Catamaran Ventures has backed several startups, including online insurance plat orm Coverfox and payment solutions startup Innoviti. His fellow Infosys ounders Kris Gopalakrishnan and S D Shibulal have set up an incubator, Axilor Ventures, in Bengaluru.
Game goes local
Tata and Pai have been on an investment spree. In two years, Tata has invested in 24 startups, while Pai has pumped money into 34 startups. Reddy of Blume Ventures believes this is a trend to cheer."Domestic home-grown capital sources are a sign of a long-term sustainable healthy ecosystem that can build exit outcomes of all sizes, not just limit all chases to unicorn hunting," he says.
PwC's Krishan, on the contrary, notes that HNI investments are quite small in value, and would not have a significant impact on the startup funding ecosystem. But Prime Venture's Swamy says the real value from such leaders is less the money itself and more their time, mentoring and guidance.
Despite treading with care, venture capitalists do have their eye on
certain sectors. For Northwest Venture Partners, early-stage software,
consumer, financial servicesfintech and healthcare companies will be
areas to watch. Prime Venture is bullish on financial services,
healthcare, education, consumermobile Internet and internet-of-things
(IoT).Blume will focus on consumer businesses, followed by deep
technology, enterprise software and data analytics.
Krishan notes that the large amounts of funding that have gone into e-commerce, education tech and food tech have changed the way people shop, study and eat. "That buying itself is unlikely to slow, unless there is a general slowdown n the economy," says Krishan.
After a frenetic period of backing ideas and enthusiasm, VC investment might become subdued. But money will still be available for good teams and good ideas.
Morgan Stanley's move to cut the value of its Flipkart holding by over a quarter is a sign of things to come
Across the country, warn ings are being sounded about the coming summer likely to be the hottest one yet. But the ones already feeling the heat are entre preneurs looking to raise millions of dollars to fund their big ideas.
If 2015 was a record year for startups receiving funding, early signs in 2016 point towards a parched year ahead. In the first two months of 2015, 85 deals worth $306 million were closed; the same period in 2016 has witnessed only 48 deals at $121 million.While some analysts describe it as a correction following a spell of wild investing, others say it's time to brace for the drought.
Going by the data, early-stage startups are continuing to garner funds, but those that have already raised significant funds are finding it difficult to raise more at higher valuations. "Early-stage startups with niche models will continue to hold investors' interest. Besides, the funding requirements at that stage are lower as the concept is not proven," says Sanjeev Krishan, a partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC).
At the other end are large players, particularly in e-commerce, who are well funded, and where the story is different. A mutual fund managed by Morgan Stanley has just cut the value of its Flipkart holding by over a quarter -suggesting that, as far as Morgan Stanley is concerned, Flipkart is now valued at about $11 billion, down from $15.2 billion in its last round.
"After multiple rounds of funding and a lot of `promise investing', investors are looking for actual performance," says Krishan. He points out that in many cases, the same investor or investor groups have put money into multiple platforms in the same segment, and they see benefits in consolidating rather than burning cash.
Performance counts
"Many companies were funded purely with an intention of using capital as a weapon to destroy competition. They will die or find it difficult to raise capital unless they are ready for a massive down round," says Mohan Kumar, executive director, Norwest Venture Partners.
Domestic and international factors have played a role in the squeeze in private equity and venture capital funding in India. The wobbling Chinese economy has cast a cloud over global markets. In the US, tech stocks have taken a beating and investors, such as Bill Gurley of VC firm Benchmark, which invested in Uber and DropBox, have told unicorns to be prepared for leaner times. Back home, volatility in the stock markets and a line of startup failures have added to the gloom. Many food-tech and hyper-local firms that took off with much fanfare and A-list backers are struggling to raise funding past the Series A round.
Food delivery startups, which are capital intensive, have been the worst hit.In October 2015, Bengaluru-based meal delivery startup Dazo -backed by Google India chief Rajan Anandan, Amazon's country manager Amit Agarwal, and others -shut down within a year of its launch after it ran short of capital.
Rocket Internet-backed Foodpanda had raised over $300 million since its launch in March 2012, but by 2015, it was beleaguered with reports of fraud. After a churn in the senior management, 300 people were fired.Its competitors Zomato and TinyOwl together fired more than 500 people in 2015 and have been scaling down. Online restaurant SpoonJoy , which was backed by Flipkart's Sachin Bansal and got $1 million from SAIF Partners, could not sustain operations and was eventually acquired by Grofers.
Startups in the e-commerce space have also found it difficult to hold their ground.Valyoo Tech, which operated a suite of premium e-commerce sites -- Bagskart, Jewelkart, Watchkart and Lenskart -de cided to focus on its best performing asset Lenskart, and shutter the rest.
Prof Thillai Rajan, department of man agement studies, IIT Madras, believes e commerce companies that got sky-high valuations in the second or third round of funding and could not deliver are in trouble "For such startups, the economies of scale are not working out," Rajan says.
Picky investors?
As more people choose the entrepreneuria path and reach out for funds, are investors becoming picky? Not really , says Sanjay Swamy , managing partner, Prime Venture Partners, which invests in very early and early-stage startups. "We look for great en trepreneurs working on huge problems. To hat end, nothing has changed for us -the quality of entrepreneurs and opportunities continue to be on the rise," he says.
Karthik Reddy , managing partner of Blume Ventures, adds that the fundamen als of team, market opportunities and innovation are always the same.
Some investors feel, if it comes, the chill will be welcome as it will separate the men rom the boys and help the right ideas shine hrough. Norwest's Kumar says: "Capital as a barrier is giving way to companies that have good execution, great product and path o profitability . Such companies will get unded and need not worry . This trend is actually very good for entrepreneurs."
Rajan believes very early and earlystage startups need not worry . "The angel network which was absent four to five years ago is strengthening now. Several new investment avenues and platforms are opening up for entrepreneurs who need help converting their ideas into businesses," he says.
Industry veterans like Nandan Nilekani, N R Narayana Murthy, Ratan Tata and T V Mohandas Pai are putting money into the startup ecosystem. Murthy's Catamaran Ventures has backed several startups, including online insurance plat orm Coverfox and payment solutions startup Innoviti. His fellow Infosys ounders Kris Gopalakrishnan and S D Shibulal have set up an incubator, Axilor Ventures, in Bengaluru.
Game goes local
Tata and Pai have been on an investment spree. In two years, Tata has invested in 24 startups, while Pai has pumped money into 34 startups. Reddy of Blume Ventures believes this is a trend to cheer."Domestic home-grown capital sources are a sign of a long-term sustainable healthy ecosystem that can build exit outcomes of all sizes, not just limit all chases to unicorn hunting," he says.
PwC's Krishan, on the contrary, notes that HNI investments are quite small in value, and would not have a significant impact on the startup funding ecosystem. But Prime Venture's Swamy says the real value from such leaders is less the money itself and more their time, mentoring and guidance.
Krishan notes that the large amounts of funding that have gone into e-commerce, education tech and food tech have changed the way people shop, study and eat. "That buying itself is unlikely to slow, unless there is a general slowdown n the economy," says Krishan.
After a frenetic period of backing ideas and enthusiasm, VC investment might become subdued. But money will still be available for good teams and good ideas.
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