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Listed startups raise over $5-bn via public markets in FY25
Listed startups raise over $5-bn via public markets in FY25

Hans India

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Hans India

Listed startups raise over $5-bn via public markets in FY25

New Delhi: Venture-backed Indian startups raised over Rs 44,000 crore ($5.3 billion) in FY25 from public markets via initial public offerings (IPOs), follow-on public offerings (FPOs), and qualified institutional placements (QIPs), a report said on Monday. Public markets outpaced private capital for late-stage fundraising, solidifying their role as the dominant source of growth capital, according to Rainmaker Group's 'RainGauge Index FY25 Annual Report'.FY25 also marked the first full market cycle for India's startup listings after a euphoric period for IPOs in 2021–22, sharp corrections in 2023, and rationalisation in 2024. 'All of this unfolded with a backdrop of a cyclical economic slowdown in India in FY25, causing a lot of consumer-facing companies to battle margin compression and weak topline momentum, the report said. The fiscal year also saw a secondary exit of over Rs 20,000 crore as private equity/venture capital (PE/VCs) harvested early bets through block deals.'FY25 didn't just test India's startup listings, it matured them,' said Kashyap Chanchani, Managing Partner, The Rainmaker Group. The public market has become the preferred playground for India's breakout companies. We've now seen the full arc - the IPO frenzy, the valuation winter, and now a clear re-rating driven by fundamentals, Chanchani said.

India's listed startups raised over ₹44,000 crore from public markets in FY25: report
India's listed startups raised over ₹44,000 crore from public markets in FY25: report

The Hindu

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • The Hindu

India's listed startups raised over ₹44,000 crore from public markets in FY25: report

Venture-backed Indian startups raised over ₹44,000 crore ($5.3 billion) in FY25 from public markets via IPOs, FPOs, and QIPs, marking a structural shift in startup fundraising lifecycle in India. According to investment bank Rainmaker Group's RainGauge Index FY25 Annual Update, public markets outpaced private capital for late-stage fundraising, solidifying their role as the dominant source of growth capital. The money raised from public markets was two times more than private late-stage capital. The year also saw a record ₹20,000+ Crore in secondary exits as PE/VC firms like Peak XV and TPG harvested early bets through block and bulk deals. 'FY25 didn't just test India's startup listings, it matured them,' said Kashyap Chanchani, Managing Partner, The Rainmaker Group. 'The public market has become the preferred playground for India's breakout companies. We've now seen the full arc - the IPO frenzy, the valuation winter, and now a clear re-rating driven by fundamentals. This is the age of seasoning. The market is no longer listening to stories, it's pricing in substance. India's innovation economy has hit a new gear, one where companies with predictable earnings, durable moats, and institutional-grade governance will dominate,' he added. The report also noted that despite the early-year correction and record FII outflows [around ₹78,000 Crore in Q1], foreign investors returned strongly by Q4, driven by rate-cut expectations and India's steady macro indicators. The year witnessed Zomato joining the NIFTY50 and SENSEX, Swiggy entering the NIFTY Next 50, and Nykaa, PB Fintech, Ola Electric inducted into the NIFTY MidCap150. 'With IPOs no longer delivering inflated valuations or easy exits, startups will have to align with public market expectations much earlier in their lifecycle,' said a statement from the company. 'Sector-specific valuation guardrails are firmly in place with two-year forward EV/EBITDA multiples now providing structured lenses across internet, SaaS, BFSI, and consumer brands. Analyst-grade metrics, unit economics, transparency, and sustainable growth stories will need to be baked in from day one. Startups must now build with capital efficiency, narrative credibility, and governance readiness and not just valuation hype,' it further read.

India's listed startups raise over $5 billion from public markets in FY25
India's listed startups raise over $5 billion from public markets in FY25

Hans India

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Hans India

India's listed startups raise over $5 billion from public markets in FY25

New Delhi: Venture-backed Indian startups raised over Rs 44,000 crore ($5.3 billion) in FY25 from public markets via initial public offerings (IPOs), follow-on public offerings (FPOs), and qualified institutional placements (QIPs), a report said on Monday. Public markets outpaced private capital for late-stage fundraising, solidifying their role as the dominant source of growth capital, according to Rainmaker Group's 'RainGauge Index FY25 Annual Report'. FY25 also marked the first full market cycle for India's startup listings after a euphoric period for IPOs in 2021–22, sharp corrections in 2023, and rationalisation in 2024. "All of this unfolded with a backdrop of a cyclical economic slowdown in India in FY25, causing a lot of consumer-facing companies to battle margin compression and weak topline momentum, the report said. The fiscal year also saw a secondary exit of over Rs 20,000 crore as private equity/venture capital (PE/VCs) harvested early bets through block deals. 'FY25 didn't just test India's startup listings, it matured them,' said Kashyap Chanchani, Managing Partner, The Rainmaker Group. The public market has become the preferred playground for India's breakout companies. We've now seen the full arc - the IPO frenzy, the valuation winter, and now a clear re-rating driven by fundamentals, Chanchani said. The financial year also saw some symbolic structural changes. Meanwhile, mutual fund participation surged, with average holdings in RainGauge Index companies, a pool of listed startups prepared by Rainmaker Group, rose from 10 per cent in March 2024 to 14 per cent in March 2025, the report said. Despite the early correction and record FII outflows of over Rs 78,000 crore in the first quarter of FY25, foreign investors returned strongly by Q4, driven by rate-cut expectations and India's steady macro indicators, the report stated. The Rainmaker Group is one of India's investment banks focused exclusively on the private markets.

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