As many as 1,000 start-ups are expected to be funded this year, but the deal size is expected to be much smaller in comparison to the hyper funding in recent years, a report says.
According to VCCEdge, the financial research platform of the VCCircle Network, which is part of News Corp, there have been 255 deals till mid-April this year and going by this rate, the number of start-ups that may receive funding this year is likely to reach the 1,000 mark.
Startup funding deals in the first quarter of this year stood at USD 301 million, registering a 50 per cent decline over the same period a year ago when the figure stood at USD 611 million, indicating that this is a year of consolidation with start-up valuations getting trimmed and early-stage investors turning cautious.
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"The deals data indicate that investors are clearly waiting on the sidelines by consolidating their existing portfolios and looking at only meaningful ones in those ventures with strong fundamentals and a good revenue earning model," Nita Kapoor, Head (India) New Ventures, News Corp, and CEO, The VCCircle Network, said.
Kapoor noted that "the decline in series A deals or the first institutional level of venture funding for start-ups is particularly worrying, thereby making it essential for them adopt the strategy of 'Conserve and Grow'.
Meanwhile, the share of start-ups in the overall private investment pie is on the rise. By volume, start-ups accounted for 70 per cent of the total transactions in 2015, up from 62 per cent in 2014.
Bengaluru continues to contribute around 25 per cent of the total start-up deal volume in India.
This report defines start-ups as companies that have reported raising an angel or seed-stage funding, or a Venture Capital round A or round B over the past five years.