What's new

China provides record funding for Indian tech start-ups

d00od00o

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Oct 17, 2018
Messages
1,530
Reaction score
-7
Country
United States
Location
United States
China provides record funding for Indian tech start-ups
Two-thirds of start-ups valued at more than $1bn have at least one Chinese investor
yesterday
http%3A%2F%2Fcom.ft.imagepublish.upp-prod-us.s3.amazonaws.com%2F53245d90-4f55-11ea-95a0-43d18ec715f5

Alibaba has invested in payments group Paytm and food-delivery service Zomato, while fellow Chinese internet giant Tencent has backed car-hailing app Ola © Bloomberg
Chinese venture capitalists provided a record amount of funding for Indian start-ups last year, fuelling concerns about their influence amid frosty relations between the two countries.

In the final quarter of the year, deals involving Chinese investors totalled a record $1.4bn, according to figures from Refinitiv. Data provider Tracxn said Chinese funds invested in 54 funding rounds last year — the largest ever number — compared with just three in 2013 and more than double what it was in 2017.

This has helped turn China into one of the biggest sources of funds for start-ups in India, joining well-established investors like Sequoia and SoftBank. Two-thirds of India’s start-ups valued at more than $1bn now have at least one Chinese VC investor.

Alibaba has invested in payments group Paytm and food-delivery service Zomato, while fellow Chinese internet giant Tencent has backed car-hailing app Ola and Byju’s, an education start-up.

Funds like Shunwei Capital and Morningside Ventures have also become more active, investing in start-ups including bike taxi app Rapido and ShareChat respectively.

Tracxn co-founder Neha Singh said that the less-developed Indian scene offers Chinese funds more potential for domination than at home, where market leaders are generally well established.

“India is a large market where a lot of the models have yet to pan out, to create large dominant players,” said Ms Singh. “In China a lot of those patterns have been taken. It's a very well-capitalised economy.”

The Observer Research Foundation, a think-tank, said: “Given China’s excess finance and technology expertise, India is the only country that has the market and the strength to absorb China’s excess capacity.”

But it added that this would have “seemed to be unthinkable till almost a decade ago”.

India and China have long been geopolitical rivals. This has translated into Indian caution about Chinese investment. It has resisted participating in China’s Belt and Road infrastructure building scheme, for example, in contrast to neighbours including Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

Chinese businesses such as smartphone maker Xiaomi and car manufacturer SAIC Motor have nonetheless expanded in India.

“Chinese funds are playing a positive role by helping Indian start-ups to raise more capital,” said Amit Bhandari, a fellow at Gateway House, another think-tank. But, he continued, “China is the rival . . . [it’s] influence has not always been very positive.”

Chinese investment can come with a degree of stigma for Indian start-ups. Politicians have expressed concerns that data could be leaked to China, for example and in 2016, Paytm founder Vijay Shekhar Sharma had to explicitly reassure users that his company remained Indian, despite Alibaba being its largest investor.
 
China provides record funding for Indian tech start-ups
Two-thirds of start-ups valued at more than $1bn have at least one Chinese investor
yesterday
http%3A%2F%2Fcom.ft.imagepublish.upp-prod-us.s3.amazonaws.com%2F53245d90-4f55-11ea-95a0-43d18ec715f5

Alibaba has invested in payments group Paytm and food-delivery service Zomato, while fellow Chinese internet giant Tencent has backed car-hailing app Ola © Bloomberg
Chinese venture capitalists provided a record amount of funding for Indian start-ups last year, fuelling concerns about their influence amid frosty relations between the two countries.

In the final quarter of the year, deals involving Chinese investors totalled a record $1.4bn, according to figures from Refinitiv. Data provider Tracxn said Chinese funds invested in 54 funding rounds last year — the largest ever number — compared with just three in 2013 and more than double what it was in 2017.

This has helped turn China into one of the biggest sources of funds for start-ups in India, joining well-established investors like Sequoia and SoftBank. Two-thirds of India’s start-ups valued at more than $1bn now have at least one Chinese VC investor.

Alibaba has invested in payments group Paytm and food-delivery service Zomato, while fellow Chinese internet giant Tencent has backed car-hailing app Ola and Byju’s, an education start-up.

Funds like Shunwei Capital and Morningside Ventures have also become more active, investing in start-ups including bike taxi app Rapido and ShareChat respectively.

Tracxn co-founder Neha Singh said that the less-developed Indian scene offers Chinese funds more potential for domination than at home, where market leaders are generally well established.

“India is a large market where a lot of the models have yet to pan out, to create large dominant players,” said Ms Singh. “In China a lot of those patterns have been taken. It's a very well-capitalised economy.”

The Observer Research Foundation, a think-tank, said: “Given China’s excess finance and technology expertise, India is the only country that has the market and the strength to absorb China’s excess capacity.”

But it added that this would have “seemed to be unthinkable till almost a decade ago”.

India and China have long been geopolitical rivals. This has translated into Indian caution about Chinese investment. It has resisted participating in China’s Belt and Road infrastructure building scheme, for example, in contrast to neighbours including Pakistan and Sri Lanka.

Chinese businesses such as smartphone maker Xiaomi and car manufacturer SAIC Motor have nonetheless expanded in India.

“Chinese funds are playing a positive role by helping Indian start-ups to raise more capital,” said Amit Bhandari, a fellow at Gateway House, another think-tank. But, he continued, “China is the rival . . . [it’s] influence has not always been very positive.”

Chinese investment can come with a degree of stigma for Indian start-ups. Politicians have expressed concerns that data could be leaked to China, for example and in 2016, Paytm founder Vijay Shekhar Sharma had to explicitly reassure users that his company remained Indian, despite Alibaba being its largest investor.

that is very encouraging .
 
that is very encouraging .

Why ? They are basically buying out these successful startup's and not funding any new start ups.
 
Why ? They are basically buying out these successful startup's and not funding any new start ups.
after all our entrepreneurs are getting money .
 
after all our entrepreneurs are getting money .

Successful entrepreneurs ALWAYS get money. There is nothing surprising about that.

There is close to zero risk involved in investing in successful businesses.
 
Why ? They are basically buying out these successful startup's and not funding any new start ups.
you should reflect on your merit of "success" even flipkart wasn't anywhere neart the levek it is today before softbank dumped shit ton of investment.Both zomato and paytm rose exponentially and still continuing to rise after foreign investement.
 
you should reflect on your merit of "success" even flipkart wasn't anywhere neart the levek it is today before softbank dumped shit ton of investment.Both zomato and paytm rose exponentially and still continuing to rise after foreign investement.

I do not own any share of Flipkart or paytm or zomato. Who told you that I did ?

They companies have been rising and expanding consistently irrespective of the source of funding. That is why they are successful start ups.
 
I do not own any share of Flipkart or paytm or zomato. Who told you that I did ?

They companies have been rising and expanding consistently irrespective of the source of funding. That is why they are successful start ups.
The lvl of so called success was so........ low. Get real,india was built upon foreign investment,india's growth is derived from foreign investment,India still needs foreign investment to grow , without foreign investment India's growth would be stunted like that child stunted bc of malnutrition.Let's not get cocky prematurely.
 
The lvl of so called success was so........ low. Get real,india was built upon foreign investment,india's growth is derived from foreign investment,India still needs foreign investment to grow , without foreign investment India's growth would be stunted like that child stunted bc of malnutrition.Let's not get cocky prematurely.

Every nation needs investments, foreign or domestic.

US is the largest destination for foreign investments (US bonds). China is second (used to be).

But ALL Nations are built on their OWN strenght.

Foreign investment comes to India because we are the BEST opportunity on the planet. Its as simple as that. They needs us MORE than we need them. THAT is why they come to India.

You might want to get some help for your low self esteem, inferiority complex and anger issues. I am not your shrink or your father to give sapce to your rant.
 
Every nation needs investments, foreign or domestic.

US is the largest destination for foreign investments (US bonds). China is second (used to be).

But ALL Nations are built on their OWN strenght.

Foreign investment comes to India because we are the BEST opportunity on the planet. Its as simple as that. They needs us MORE than we need them. THAT is why they come to India.

You might want to get some help for your low self esteem, inferiority complex and anger issues. I am not your shrink or your father to give sapce to your rant.
It's apparent you don't construe at what stage Indian economy actually is.
Foreign investments comes because those foreign entities has a shit load of EXTRA money that they needed to invest somewhere. China totally dominates the electronic market in india with barely any effort,yet china actually gives two hoots about profit in India for the gain therein is so irrelevant compared to their overall working,no developed country thinks india is among the most profitable .What they are doing right now is charity in the hope that some day they get some returns when Indian economy actually improves.

You think my pragmatic view is inferiority complex and low self exteem?
India isn't at that level for y'all to be afforded the luxury of "proudness" . You're deluded.People like you are so out of it in head that they can't understand the real underlying problems and one's OWN lacking;but instead, make shit up in their head about how great they are and everything about them and then believe it. This is why India is behind even deep african nations in ppp.
 
Last edited:
It's apparent you don't construe at what stage Indian economy actually is.
Foreign investments comes because those foreign entities has a shit load of EXTRA money that they needed to invest somewhere. China totally dominates the electronic market in india with barely any effort,yet china actually gives two hoots about profit in India for the gain therein is so irrelevant compared to their overall working,no developed country thinks india is among the most profitable .What they are doing right now is charity in the hope that some day they get some returns when Indian economy actually improves.

You think my pragmatic view is inferiority complex and low self exteem?
India isn't at that level for y'all to be afforded the luxury of "proudness" . You're deluded.People like you are so out of it in head that they can't understand the real underlying problems and one's OWN lacking;but instead, make shit up in their head about how great they are and everything about them and then believe it. This is why India is behind even deep african nations in ppp.

LOL at morons who think FDI's are "Charity" :lol:

This level of absurdity does not even deserve a response.

But then again idiots who think china does not give "two hoots about profit" clearly live in their own fools paradise.

Now here is one free english lesson, its not "proudness" its called "PRIDE".

Btw what is wrong in being behind "deep african nations" ? You clearly suffer from delusions of superiority as a reaction to your inferiority complex.

Get help.
 
It's apparent you don't construe at what stage Indian economy actually is.
Foreign investments comes because those foreign entities has a shit load of EXTRA money that they needed to invest somewhere. China totally dominates the electronic market in india with barely any effort,yet china actually gives two hoots about profit in India for the gain therein is so irrelevant compared to their overall working,no developed country thinks india is among the most profitable .What they are doing right now is charity in the hope that some day they get some returns when Indian economy actually improves.

You think my pragmatic view is inferiority complex and low self exteem?
India isn't at that level for y'all to be afforded the luxury of "proudness" . You're deluded.People like you are so out of it in head that they can't understand the real underlying problems and one's OWN lacking;but instead, make shit up in their head about how great they are and everything about them and then believe it. This is why India is behind even deep african nations in ppp.
Lol no one does any charity. Its pure business. And instead of ranting and mocking others , learn to have a civil debate.
 
Back
Top Bottom