Business | Growing pains

The painful development of India’s startups

Time and money are running out

Delivery riders for Zomato Ltd., center, and Swiggy, operated by Bundl Technologies Pvt., wait to collect orders outside a restaurant in Mumbai, India, on Friday, July 16, 2021. Zomato $1.3 billion initial public offering was fully subscribed on the first day of sale, after anchor funds including BlackRock Inc. bid for 35 times more stock than was offered to them. Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg via Getty Images
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|BANGALORE

“How long is your runway before takeoff?” That is how venture capitalists (vcs) begin meetings in India these days, says Ananth Narayanan, founder of Mensa, one of the country’s newest unicorns (companies worth in excess of $1bn). Until recently the main question that mattered for India’s startup scene was valuation. But the mood has changed. Plunging share prices at companies that have gone public have made vc firms much warier about investing. Prizing unrealistic valuations has given way to worrying about how quickly startups might begin to make money. So far Mensa, which buys stakes in digital brands, is one of a handful of such firms that makes a profit.

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Growing pains”

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