ADVERTISEMENT

Capital A Announces Rs 400 Crore Fund To Invest In Manufacturing, Deep-Tech, And Fintech Startups

The investor base for Fund II will be primarily domestic, with backing from family offices, industry leaders, HNIs and like minded LPs and returning partners from previous funds, like Manjushree Ventures.

<div class="paragraphs"><p>Capital A founder and lead investor Ankit Kedia said the company has sought approval of market regulator SEBI and expects the approval to come by end of the year.</p><p>Image for representational purpose. (Source:&nbsp;<a href="https://unsplash.com/@micheile?utm_source=unsplash&amp;utm_medium=referral&amp;utm_content=creditCopyText">micheile henderson</a>/ <a href="https://unsplash.com/s/photos/savings?utm_source=unsplash&amp;utm_medium=referral&amp;utm_content=creditCopyText">Unsplash</a>)</p></div>
Capital A founder and lead investor Ankit Kedia said the company has sought approval of market regulator SEBI and expects the approval to come by end of the year.

Image for representational purpose. (Source: micheile henderson/ Unsplash)

Venture capital firm Capital A on Friday announced the launch of its second fund that will focus on high-potential sectors such as manufacturing, deep-tech, climate and fintech startups with a target corpus of Rs 400 crore.

Capital A founder and lead investor Ankit Kedia said the company has sought approval of market regulator SEBI and expects the approval to come by end of the year.

"Our target for Fund II is Rs 300 crore, with a green shoe option of Rs 100 crore, and we anticipate closing by December 2025, following SEBI approval expected by the end of this year. Through Fund II, we aim to bridge this gap by concentrating on long-term value creation in these segments," Kedia said.

With plans to invest in 17-20 companies, Capital-A will cut cheques of $2-3 million over the lifecycle of the startup, with the first cheque ranging from $750,000-$1 million, the company said in a statement.

The investor base for Fund II will be primarily domestic, with backing from family offices, industry leaders, HNIs and like minded LPs and returning partners from previous funds, like Manjushree Ventures.

Many high-potential sectors, especially manufacturing businesses are highly undervalued assets, with great potential to scale quickly and become an important contributor in the startup ecosystem.

"Other areas of interest include sectors like climate, deep-tech and fintech which continue to be a thesis from our previous fund. We will continue to dive deeper into the sectors and increase our breadth in the other sub-sectors," Kedia said.

The company has made investment starts up like Chargeup, Bambrew, Jiraaf Leumas BharatSure and Entuple through Fund 1.

Opinion
LIC Manufacturing Fund To Reduce SIP Amounts From October First Week