&w=3840&q=100)
Why angel investors in India may soon be rarer than Bengal tigers
Bloomberg
Angel investing in India has just crossed a modest milestone of $1 billion in commitments, and already the nascent asset class is facing extinction. Blame it on an overdose of regulatory attention.
Until recently, affluent individuals who placed small bets on long shots were targeted with a bizarre 'angel tax,' which viewed startups' fundraising as taxable income. Now that the government has finally scrapped the draconian levy, the Securities and Exchange Board of India has sown fresh seeds of disquiet for people who want to try early-stage allocations via collective investment plans: It wants them to get accredited.
Commitments into angel funds have swelled by 44 per cent over the past year, and investments have surged by a third. These are reasonable growth rates, but the Sebi seems to believe that it can give a further boost to the 'ease of doing business.'
The regulator means well. It wants to unshackle angel investors from India's Companies Act, which limits participation in private placement of securities to 200 subscribers. Any more will require public offerings. But this rule is unfair to regulated funds, where professional managers are required to have skin in the game. Plus, the risks are explained in a memorandum, and explicit investor consent is needed for each bet. There's clearly a need to distinguish between private placements and angel investing. But how does the regulator sidestep a law made by parliament?
It has come up with a plan. From next year, individuals who invest in angel funds will be treated as Qualified Institutional Buyers. Since the law exempts QIBs from the 200-person rule, managers will no longer have to limit participation. This 'would allow angel funds to show opportunities to a wider pool of eligible investors, while staying in conformity with the Companies Act,' the Sebi said last month.
There's a catch, however. Since individuals aren't really institutions, the Sebi wants them to become accredited investors like in the US to qualify for the exemption. They will have a year to adjust to the new regime. Trouble is that while 13 per cent of Americans meet the thresholds for buying private securities, so far only 650 Indians have successfully applied for accreditation, according to ET Wealth. That makes them rarer than the Bengal tiger, an endangered species.
Do only 0.00005 per cent of Indians earn more than ₹2 crore ($230,000) annually, or have a net worth in excess of $860,000? Not really. Counting just the top tax payers, at least 60,000 people should easily meet those minimum standards. But to get accredited, people have to provide proof to third parties. In a country where authorities send tax bills to roadside vegetable vendors by tracing QR-code-based payments, it's in nobody's interest to furnish documentation showing how rich they are. Not when the memory of the disastrous 'angel tax' is still fresh.
Even if the goal is to drive accreditation, why single out startup investors who are doing something worthwhile with their money and time? That already sets them apart from the nine out of 10 Indian retail traders betting on equity options and being taken to the cleaners by big whales like Jane Street. The public-market casino is where the regulator needs to police participation. Private markets don't need the same level of scrutiny beyond ensuring that the capital entering fledgling firms is not tainted.
At present, angel investors only self-certify a minimum net worth to their fund manager. The thresholds are low, as is the compliance burden. It is a lax process. Not everyone who is being invited to dabble in unlisted securities has the risk appetite for it. But as long as they are giving informed consent, they can be safely left alone. It's the insurance and banking regulators that have to put a stop to much more widespread deceptive selling in their industries. Why's the Sebi rushing to fix what isn't broken?
The $1.2 billion that angels have committed so far may not produce superstar enterprises. That's fine, as long as a growing pot of money helps nurture some gritty entrepreneurs. As I wrote last week, millennial and Gen Z billionaires among India's traditional family-owned firms are bored with business. They don't fancy their chances against either large tycoons, or smart startup founders. But the latter need financing.
The Sebi's other ideas are laudable. Relaxing the floor and cap on investments, doing away with concentration limits on exposure, and allowing funds to keep backing startups as they mature will improve returns. But forcing investors to get accredited by third parties? That's sure to backfire, unless the Sebi itself obtains their permission to query the tax returns database. A simple yes or no answer to the eligibility question, based on information they have already shared with tax authorities, could help increase the number of 650 accredited investors manifold. The rich in India are far from endangered, but they don't want to flaunt their stripes any more than they have to.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
Sebi looks at rejigging IPO norms
MUMBAI: Markets regulator Sebi has proposed an overhaul of large IPOs (over Rs 5,000 crore), reducing the retail investor quota from 35% to 25% and raising institutional investor allocation to 60%. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Retail participation has remained flat despite larger sizes. SEBI also aims to increase anchor investor slots for allocations above Rs 250 crore to aid foreign portfolio investors. It proposed raising anchor reservations for insurers, pension funds, and mutual funds from 30% to 40%, with specific sub-quotas for each category.


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
U.S. Dollar rate: USD registers first monthly gain of 2025. Check predictions for 2025?
US dollar index was up 0.16 per cent at 99.949 after rising nearly 1 per cent in the previous session. It is on track for the first monthly gain in 2025. Euro was last up 0.19 per cent at $1.1426, having hit a seven-week low on Wednesday. Still, it remained on track to lose nearly 3 per cent this month. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads FAQs U.S. dollar was headed for its first monthly gain for 2025 against major currencies on Thursday, underpinned by easing trade tensions and U.S. economic resilience. The dollar rose against the yen, trading at its highest level since May 28. It is on track to gain about 5 per cent for July, making it the biggest monthly increase since December 2024. It was last up 0.83 per cent at 150.765. In a widely expected move, the Bank of Japan on Thursday kept short-term interest rates steady at 0.5 per cent by a unanimous vote, but revised up its inflation forecasts for the next few years. That came after the Federal Reserve left U.S. interest rates unchanged on Wednesday, ignoring persistent calls by President Donald Trump to lower borrowing costs. Fed Chair Jerome Powell also indicated he was in no rush to cut rates. The greenback has been bolstered by a hawkish Fed and U.S. economic resilience, with uncertainty over Trump's chaotic tariffs easing after an array of trade deals. The dollar index was up 0.16 per cent at 99.949 after rising nearly 1 per cent in the previous session. It is on track for the first monthly gain in 2025."There's been a clash and a friction between what the Fed is seeing and deciding to do, and what the White House and perhaps a lot of people in the equity market want the Fed to do," said Juan Perez, director of trading of Monex USA in Washington. "If we had left the hawkish tone, the hawkish stance, and the hawkish press conference altogether, it makes sense to see the U.S. dollar rise - which it did. But today, because of the friction between the Fed and the White House, the dollar is once again hitting the brakes," Perez added. Data showed that the number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits increased just marginally last week, suggesting that the U.S. labor market remained euro has been one of the biggest casualties of the dollar's ascent this month, as investors have rushed to unwind bets laid on earlier this year on the premise that the European market may offer better euro was last up 0.19 per cent at $1.1426, having hit a seven-week low on Wednesday. Still, it remained on track to lose nearly 3 per cent this month."I think there was too much optimism in the price of the euro. And I think that's come back this week. There's been a lot of commentary about how the EU conceded to the U.S. on this trade deal and that's been a dose of reality for the Europeans," Rabobank strategist Jane Foley said. The dollar weakened 0.31 per cent against the Swiss franc to 0.812 franc but it is on track to gain 2.36 per cent for the month. The European Union's agreement on Sunday to 15 per cent tariffs on U.S. exports has cleared up a lot of Governor Kazuo Ueda also said the U.S.-Japan trade deal reduced uncertainty on the outlook and heightened the likelihood of Japan durably hitting the BOJ's 2 per cent inflation target - a prerequisite for further rate U.S. trade deals included one with South Korea, which Trump said on Wednesday would pay a 15 per cent tariff on U.S. imports. That was lower than a threatened 25 per cent and the Korean won strengthened on the news and last stood at 1,395.21 per dollar. Trump on Wednesday also slapped a 50 per cent tariff on most Brazilian goods and said the United States is still negotiating with India. But he gave Mexico a 90-day reprieve ahead of his Friday deal deadline."We do however continue to expect that the tariff rates now being announced and codified will ultimately prove to be more dollar negative, even if some of the bilateral announcements (particularly on the EU) likely catalysed the striking dollar rebound so far this week," Goldman Sachs analysts led by Stuart Jenkins wrote in an investor note.A1. The symbol of the US Dollar is $.A2. The euro was last up 0.19 per cent at $1.1426, having hit a seven-week low on Wednesday. Still, it remained on track to lose nearly 3 per cent this month.


Economic Times
2 hours ago
- Economic Times
U.S. Dollar rate: USD registers first monthly gain of 2025. Check predictions for 2025?
Live Events FAQs (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel U.S. dollar was headed for its first monthly gain for 2025 against major currencies on Thursday, underpinned by easing trade tensions and U.S. economic resilience. The dollar rose against the yen, trading at its highest level since May 28. It is on track to gain about 5 per cent for July, making it the biggest monthly increase since December 2024. It was last up 0.83 per cent at 150.765. In a widely expected move, the Bank of Japan on Thursday kept short-term interest rates steady at 0.5 per cent by a unanimous vote, but revised up its inflation forecasts for the next few years. That came after the Federal Reserve left U.S. interest rates unchanged on Wednesday, ignoring persistent calls by President Donald Trump to lower borrowing costs. Fed Chair Jerome Powell also indicated he was in no rush to cut rates. The greenback has been bolstered by a hawkish Fed and U.S. economic resilience, with uncertainty over Trump's chaotic tariffs easing after an array of trade deals. The dollar index was up 0.16 per cent at 99.949 after rising nearly 1 per cent in the previous session. It is on track for the first monthly gain in 2025."There's been a clash and a friction between what the Fed is seeing and deciding to do, and what the White House and perhaps a lot of people in the equity market want the Fed to do," said Juan Perez, director of trading of Monex USA in Washington. "If we had left the hawkish tone, the hawkish stance, and the hawkish press conference altogether, it makes sense to see the U.S. dollar rise - which it did. But today, because of the friction between the Fed and the White House, the dollar is once again hitting the brakes," Perez added. Data showed that the number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits increased just marginally last week, suggesting that the U.S. labor market remained euro has been one of the biggest casualties of the dollar's ascent this month, as investors have rushed to unwind bets laid on earlier this year on the premise that the European market may offer better euro was last up 0.19 per cent at $1.1426, having hit a seven-week low on Wednesday. Still, it remained on track to lose nearly 3 per cent this month."I think there was too much optimism in the price of the euro. And I think that's come back this week. There's been a lot of commentary about how the EU conceded to the U.S. on this trade deal and that's been a dose of reality for the Europeans," Rabobank strategist Jane Foley said. The dollar weakened 0.31 per cent against the Swiss franc to 0.812 franc but it is on track to gain 2.36 per cent for the month. The European Union's agreement on Sunday to 15 per cent tariffs on U.S. exports has cleared up a lot of Governor Kazuo Ueda also said the U.S.-Japan trade deal reduced uncertainty on the outlook and heightened the likelihood of Japan durably hitting the BOJ's 2 per cent inflation target - a prerequisite for further rate U.S. trade deals included one with South Korea, which Trump said on Wednesday would pay a 15 per cent tariff on U.S. imports. That was lower than a threatened 25 per cent and the Korean won strengthened on the news and last stood at 1,395.21 per dollar. Trump on Wednesday also slapped a 50 per cent tariff on most Brazilian goods and said the United States is still negotiating with India. But he gave Mexico a 90-day reprieve ahead of his Friday deal deadline."We do however continue to expect that the tariff rates now being announced and codified will ultimately prove to be more dollar negative, even if some of the bilateral announcements (particularly on the EU) likely catalysed the striking dollar rebound so far this week," Goldman Sachs analysts led by Stuart Jenkins wrote in an investor note.A1. The symbol of the US Dollar is $.A2. The euro was last up 0.19 per cent at $1.1426, having hit a seven-week low on Wednesday. Still, it remained on track to lose nearly 3 per cent this month.