New VC Funds From Aeravti Ventures And Aum Ventures Could Give Indian Deep-Tech Startups Fresh Firepower

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New VC Funds From Aeravti Ventures And Aum Ventures Could Give Indian Deep-Tech Startups Fresh Firepower
New VC Funds From Aeravti Ventures And Aum Ventures Could Give Indian Deep-Tech Startups Fresh Firepower

India’s early-stage startup market may be getting fresh capital at an important time. Aeravti Ventures is reportedly preparing its second fund with a target corpus of Rs. 250-300 crore. Separately, Aum Ventures has announced its $80 million India Innovation Fund II to back early-stage deep-tech startups.

This matters because many serious startups do not fail only because of weak ideas. They often struggle because early capital is limited, customer cycles are long, and investors want quick proof before the product is fully ready.

New funds like these can help founders working in deep-tech, biotech, agritech, enterprise technology, AI, robotics, semiconductors, climate tech and Bharat-focused businesses. These are not always fast-money sectors, but they can create long-term value for society.

What Aeravti Ventures is planning

Aeravti Ventures is an early-stage venture capital firm that has focused on deep-tech, biotech, agritech, enterprise-tech and Bharat-focused startups. Its first fund was announced in 2023, with cheque sizes reportedly ranging from $500,000 to $2 million. The firm’s co-founders include Shubham Jhuria and Rishabh Singh.

The second fund, reportedly targeting Rs. 250-300 crore, could give Aeravti more room to back new founders and support existing portfolio companies with follow-on capital. That follow-on support is important. A startup building a biotech platform, agri hardware product or enterprise AI tool may need more than one cheque before it reaches commercial scale.

What Aum Ventures’ India Innovation Fund II means

Aum Ventures’ $80 million India Innovation Fund II is aimed at early-stage deep-tech startups. Deep-tech usually means startups building serious technology based on research, engineering, science or defensible intellectual property. This can include AI infrastructure, robotics, space technology, climate hardware, advanced manufacturing, semiconductors, health-tech, cybersecurity and industrial automation.

For India, this type of capital is important because deep-tech founders often need patient investors. Their products take longer to build, test and sell. But when they work, they can solve large problems and create global companies from India.

Why early-stage VC funds matter

Early-stage funds are often the first institutional believers in a startup. They invest when the company may still have a small team, early customers and an unfinished product. A founder building an EV battery system, for example, cannot grow only with laptop work. They need labs, testing, safety approvals, supply chains and pilot customers. A healthcare startup may need clinical validation. A robotics startup may need hardware prototypes.

This is where early-stage capital can make a real difference. It helps founders hire engineers, build products, run pilots and reach the next funding stage.

Impact on Indian startups

The biggest impact will be confidence. When more early-stage funds enter the market, founders feel encouraged to build harder companies, not just quick apps. India already has strong software talent. The next stage is building companies that combine software with science, hardware, manufacturing and domain knowledge.

Aeravti’s focus on Bharat markets can also help startups outside the usual metro bubble. Many real problems in India sit in agriculture, logistics, healthcare access, small business digitization and regional markets while Aum Ventures’ deep-tech focus can help founders who are trying to build export-ready technology from India.

What sectors may benefit

AI startups may get stronger backing, especially those building enterprise tools, voice systems, automation platforms and India-specific AI models.

  • Climate-tech startups may benefit as India looks for cleaner energy, better batteries, green hydrogen and waste-to-energy solutions.
  • Agritech startups may use capital to build tools for farmers, supply chains, soil testing, crop intelligence and farm automation.
  • Biotech and health-tech startups may get support for diagnostics, precision medicine and affordable healthcare solutions.
  • Defence and space-tech startups may also attract interest as India pushes self-reliance in strategic technology.

Competitors and market check

Aeravti Ventures and Aum Ventures will operate in a competitive early-stage funding market. Their peers include funds such as Speciale Invest, Pi Ventures, Seafund, Blume Ventures, 3one4 Capital, India Quotient, Accel, Peak XV’s Surge and others.

The competition is good for founders. More specialized funds mean better chances of finding investors who understand difficult sectors.

A deep-tech founder does not only need money. They need investors who understand long development cycles, regulatory approvals, customer pilots and technical risk.

What founders should watch

Founders should not choose investors only by fund size. They should look at fit. A good investor can help with hiring, customer introductions, future fundraising, governance and strategic decisions. A wrong investor may push for growth before the company is ready.

For early-stage startups, patient capital is very valuable. A founder building in biotech or hardware may need more time than a consumer app founder. Investors must understand that difference.

Conclusion with key takeaways

Aeravti Ventures’ planned Rs. 250-300 crore second fund and Aum Ventures’ $80 million India Innovation Fund II show that early-stage capital is still moving toward serious Indian innovation.

Key takeaways

  • Aeravti Ventures is reportedly preparing its second fund with a target of Rs. 250-300 crore.
  • Aum Ventures has announced an $80 million India Innovation Fund II for early-stage deep-tech startups.
  • These funds can support startups in AI, biotech, agritech, climate tech, robotics, enterprise tech and Bharat markets.
  • The biggest impact may be more patient capital for founders solving complex problems.

For startups, investor quality, sector understanding and follow-on support will matter as much as cheque size.

Facts Input- VCCircle and Entrackr


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