Startup
Antler India spotlights 10 new portfolio startups disrupting their fields
Pre-seed investment company Antler India hosted its third Spotlight event, which brought together its portfolio companies with funds and investors.
At the event, 10 startup founders spoke about their ventures, which ranged from fashion tech to legal tech.
Tradomate
Riding the AI boom, Tradomate is an algo trading platform founded by Ritvik Dashora, Yashu Gupta, and Satyam Upadhyay. Using AI-powered intelligence, it aims to make investing easier for its clients and traders.
The company, which went live in March this year, is targeting about 200,000 super traders in the next 12 months.
ALT Fashion
ALT Fashion is another startup using AI models to disrupt how products are aggregated and discovered on shopping platforms such as Myntra and Marks & Spencer.
Founded by brother-sister duo Rashida Bohra and Abbas Ali Bohra, the platform currently has a 40% add-to-cart conversion on a monthly activated base, which refers to the percentage of website visitors who successfully added a product to their shopping cart and proceeded to complete the checkout process. The industry benchmark is 10%.
Bookee
Bookee, an AI-based vertical SaaS startup for wellness, aims to help business owners in the space simplify operations, manage clients, automate campaigns, and more. The company is targeting $10 million in annual recurring revenue (ARR) in the next 18-24 months.
According to Antler, while Ola and Uber have completed 600 million trips in India, it takes less than one month for all intercity bus travel in the country to reach the same number.
ApniBus
ApniBus is a startup aiming to build an intercity mobility platform to help simplify intercity bus travel.
Founded by Sumit Gupta and Ravi Yadav, the company taps into the 30 million intercity bus travellers and the 750,000 buses that operate daily. It aims to increase the less than 2% online penetration of these buses so travellers can book seats online.
Cautio
Cautio has built a full-stack video telematics system to reduce on-road and in-vehicle incidents by 50% in five years.
The dash-cam maker, founded by Ankit Acharya and Pranjal Nadhani, added that it has signed 4,500 vehicles in the three months since its launch, and 20,000 vehicles are currently in the pipeline.
According to Acharya, the company will be hitting a $3 million run-rate with over 30 customers in the next 19 months.
Nurturev
SaaS startup Nurturev focuses on revenue expansion technology using AI agents to capture and synthesize unstructured data to automate account research for its clients.
Founded by Sayanta Ghosh, Rajat Jain and Nikhil Ojha, the company employs more than 50 data sources to automate account research for its clients and helps them discover opportunities from account whitespaces.
The company is on track to reach $1 million in ARR in the next nine months, it said at the event.
Covrzy
Insurance startup Covrzy provides insurance coverage for Indian micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs).
Covrzy added that it is currently exploring partnerships with Delhivery, Blue Dart, and Zepto, among others.
Gladful
India has one of the lowest protein consumption rates in the world, at less than 2 kilograms per person annually. Gladful aims to address this gap through its breakfast line, which includes sprouted lentil chilli, pancakes, and dosa mix, among others.
Other startups that presented at the Spotlight event included generative AI software startup for comic and 2D animation, Autodraft, and Unsuit, a company that has built an AI-powered platform for legal tech.
Startup
Swiggy IPO: Retail portion subscribed 84%, overall 35% shares allotted
Food delivery and quick commerce platform Swiggy’s Initial Public Offering (IPO) was subscribed only 35% on the second day of bidding as broader market indices slipped in red.
Sriharsha Majety-led Swiggy witnessed the quota reserved for employees being subscribed 1.15 times by the end of bidding on the second day. Retail investors subscribed to 84% of the shares.
According to data from the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), non-institutional investors purchased 14% of their allocated shares, and qualified institutional buyers’ (QIBs) part was booked at 28%.
As of the second day, Swiggy’s IPO received bids for 5.57 crore shares, amounting to 35% of the total issue size. The issue was subscribed 12% on day one.
Swiggy, which is set to list on Indian stock markets on November 13, initially aimed for a valuation of approximately $15 billion, but later updated its RHP to seek a valuation of around Rs 87,000 crore or about $11.3 billion at the upper price band.
“Swiggy’s decision to lower its valuation leaves some upside room for the investors, we still recommend an AVOID recommendation to this issue due to the “reported negative” cash flows and ongoing losses, alongside a slightly high valuation of 7.7x FY24 price-to-sales,” noted Aditya Birla Money in a research report dated Nov 4.
It raised nearly Rs 5,085 crore (about $605 million) from anchor investors, which included life insurance and mutual fund arms of HDFC, ICICI, and SBI. The anchor book, which witnessed participation from over 75 key domestic mutual funds, also saw bids from global mutual fund investors like Astrone Capital, Fidelity, and Blackrock.
Swiggy plans to raise close to Rs 11,700 crore in its IPO which will include fresh issue of 11.54 crore equity shares along with an offer for sale (OFS) of 17.51 crore equity share by existing stakeholders. It has set IPO price band at Rs 371- Rs 390.
Startup
Northern Arc secures $65M debt commitment for maiden climate fund
Northern Arc has raised $65 million in debt commitments for its maiden Climate Fund, through its fund management arm, Northern Arc Investments IFSC Trust.
The debt commitments include $50 million from the United States International Development Finance Corp (DFC) and $15 million from the official Development Bank of the Republic of Austria, OeEB, it said in a statement on Thursday.
The non-banking financial institution’s (NBFC) fund aims to address critical funding gaps of growth stage startups in the solar energy, e-mobility, sustainable agriculture, and circular economy spaces.
“The significant investment from DFC and OeEB reinforces our ongoing commitment to revolutionise climate finance and transform the financial landscape for all households and businesses in India. By channelling these funds into green projects across our focus sectors of MSME, affordable housing, vehicle finance, agriculture finance, microfinance, and consumer finance, we aim to create a cascading effect that promotes sustainable development,” said Ashish Mehrotra, Managing Director and CEO, Northern Arc.
In October, the company launched its performing credit AIF fund (Category II), ‘Finserv Fund’, through its subsidiary Northern Arc Investment Managers (NAIM).
The fund aims to raise a target corpus of Rs 1,500 crore, including a greenshoe option of Rs 500 crore.
Northern Arc has assets under management (AUM) worth Rs 15,121 crore through its balance sheets and active AIF funds, as of September 30. It is backed by investors such as Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, LeapFrog, and 360 ONE, among others.
Startup
PhysicsWallah’s losses widen FY24 as rising expenses overshadow 2.6X revenue growth
Edtech unicorn PhysicsWallah (PW) saw its losses widen significantly in FY 2023-24, fueled by a sharp rise in employee benefit costs and other expenditures, casting a shadow over a 2.6-fold increase in operating revenue.
The Noida-based company also revised its FY 2022-23 figures, now reporting a loss of Rs 84.1 crore, in contrast to the Rs 8.9 crore profit previously stated in its earlier consolidated financial statements.
The heavy losses come on the back of the edtech company’s rapid expansion over the past couple of years. PW, which initially focused on the test-prep segment, has rapidly diversified its educational offerings over the past few years to encompass everything—from school education to skills training—casting its learning net over a wide base of learners.
PW’s rapid expansion comes amid a turbulent period for BYJU’S, once the leading edtech platform and the poster child of the Indian startup ecosystem.
The Alakh Pandey-led firm reported a consolidated loss of Rs 1,131.3 crore in FY24, up 13.5X from Rs 84.1 crore recorded in the earlier fiscal period.
The reported losses were impacted by non-cash adjustments, such as Compulsorily Convertible Preference Shares (CCPS) amounting to Rs 756 crore, according to the company. This CCPS expense is recorded in relation to the buyback clause provided in the issued CCPS, based on the conversion of accounting standards from IGAAP to INDAS, it added.
After excluding the non-cash adjustment, the company’s actual cash losses come to approximately Rs 375 crore, up 4.4X.
The company had remained the only profitable edtech firm until FY22, while steadily growing its top line.
Its operating revenue surged 160.7%, touching Rs 1,940.4 crore in FY24 compared to Rs 744.3 crore in FY23, as per its recent consolidated financial statements.
The startup’s total income reached Rs 2,015.1 crore, up 160.8% increase year-on-year (YoY).
For context, BYJU’S surpassed the Rs 2,000 crore revenue mark in FY20 and Eruditus in FY23, while PW achieved this milestone in its fourth year of operations. BYJU’S was incorporated in 2011, Eruditus in 2010, and PW in 2020.
Meanwhile, the company’s expenses surged by 280.4% to Rs 3,279.1 crore in FY24 compared with Rs 862 crore in FY23.
The sharp rise in expenses was driven by employee benefits, the firm’s second-largest cost centre, which jumped to Rs 1,159 crore—a 180.9% YoY.
Its other expenses surged by 442.4% YoY to Rs 1,660 crore, including a significant increase in miscellaneous expenses, which rose by 755.9% to Rs 1,452.7 crore.
Interestingly, PW also reduced its advertising and promotional expenses by 39.9%, although these still accounted for the company’s second-largest expense, totalling Rs 37.3 crore in FY24 compared with Rs 62.1 crore in FY23.
PW has experienced impressive growth, however, sustainable growth and profitability are essential, and it must navigate its own challenges as it expands.
Earlier this year, PW Co-founder Prateek Maheshwari told YourStory that FY24 was the year of “growth,” while FY25 is the year of “sustainable growth,” as PW aims to return to a profitable path.
“We have bounced back this year, with the first two quarters being EBITDA profitable for the first time in our company’s history,” he added. EBITDA, or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation, is a measure of core operational efficiency.
While the profitability metric for FY25 cannot be determined due to the transition from I-GAAP to Ind-AS, this fiscal year is expected to be the highest in absolute EBITDA profitability since inception, according to Maheshwari.
I-GAAP (Indian Generally Accepted Accounting Principles) refers to the traditional accounting standards used in the country, while Ind-AS (Indian Accounting Standards) is a set of accounting standards aligned with IFRS (International Financial Reporting Standards) for greater transparency and consistency.
In September, PW raised $210 million in a Series B funding round led by investment firm Hornbill Capital, with a sizable participation from venture capital firm Lightspeed Venture Partners. This was a significant milestone given the scarcity of substantial deals in India’s edtech sector lately.
With the latest funding round, PW’s post-money valuation has soared to $2.8 billion, making it the third-most valued edtech firm, trailing only Unacademy ($3.4 billion) and Eruditus ($3.2 billion), based on their last valuations.
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