Rashmi Guptey
1st February 2022
Harish Talreja
25th January 2022
Sid Talwar
31st December 2021
Ankit Moorjani
30th June 2021
20th January 2024
Sandeep Murthy
17th March 2022
1st January 2020
20th November 2017
7th June 2022
15th May 2022
17th February 2022
28th November 2023
Prashant Mehta
2nd February 2022
22nd September 2021
30th August 2021
15th March 2022
21st January 2022
14th January 2022
5th November 2024
Monish Pathare
28th October 2024
4th October 2024
5th August 2024
20th October 2021
25th April 2021
Akshat Jain
12th February 2021
31st May 2020
Tanya Rohatgi
19th August 2024
20th June 2024
Siddhant Ahuja
25th April 2022
14th February 2022
2nd June 2018
5th June 2024
15th February 2024
9th February 2024
26th May 2022
1st February 2024
20th November 2020
Shivani Daiya
20th February 2020
17th August 2014
17th October 2024
18th July 2019
17th September 2021
15th September 2021
Maansi Vohra
28th January 2021
Atharva Purandare
10th January 2021
Tanvi Ghate
23rd January 2024
Ahan Rajgor
12th May 2022
8th March 2022
22nd February 2022
22nd August 2024
29th July 2024
5th June 2022
5th May 2022
16th April 2021
15th November 2014
25th October 2021
8th March 2020
7th August 2018
27th December 2016
17th February 2021
29th September 2020
24th September 2020
26th July 2020
20th January 2020
15th October 2018
26th June 2018
13th June 2017
21st May 2024
13th February 2024
15th July 2024
10th April 2024
20th February 2024
Public markets are currently hammering all stocks due to the interest rate reset taking place... the good ones will emerge stronger and need not worry given their fundamentals. However, the public market investors need to learn how to value loss-making businesses as well.
It’s a new year, and so far, an eventful first month for investors, entrepreneurs, and the stock markets. This blog takes a look at the start-ups that turned unicorns last year or went public recently and assesses the reaction from the investor community, primarily focused on the valuation. I’m also sharing some thoughts on the way public markets are evaluating businesses that are redefining the way India orders food, shops for products and consumes media content.
In 2021, 42 Indian start-ups entered the unicorn club, up from 10 start-ups that turned unicorn in 2020. This is a result of the excellent execution by start-up entrepreneurs across India and investors willingness to participate in India’s growth story. It gives investors in the public and private markets a clear signal that start-ups in India are scaling up and consumers need to access their services or products on a daily basis. As we wrote mid-last year, the party is just getting started.
From the public market perspective, we noted 63 companies going for a public listing last year and this included about 13 start-ups or venture backed businesses. These 13 start-ups collectively raised $6.5Bn of capital from public market investors. As a fund, we tried to understand more about the companies accessing the public markets. We also tracked how these companies have been performing before and after going public which helps us learn how distinct set of investors value the same business. The public market volatility creates unnecessary noise and impacts company valuation on a daily basis versus the stagnant valuation from one funding round to the next. This stagnation prevails for several months at times, unless they raise the next round of financing from venture capital or private equity investors.
Some companies that recently went public and sparked our interest demonstrate interesting performance parameters. A few high-growth tech stocks that shot up in valuation last year are returning to reasonable valuations in anticipation of the US Fed increasing interest rates. The increase in interest rates by the US Fed pulls out liquidity from the financial markets. The reason high-growth tech stocks witnessed a sharp rise in their stock price was primarily because of the excess liquidity in the system. The other reason is the Fed printed billions of its own currency during 2020 and 2021 and started buying US 10-year bonds, flooding the market with additional liquidity. Now, it is slowing down this quantitative easing affecting liquidity and impacting inflation.
The table below displays the performance of a select set of tech companies post their listing and from their peak valuation:
Based on our assessment, from the above list, the most affected companies are the loss-making tech start-ups. It is also interesting to note how the market capitalization of certain companies has increased or decreased since the time it went public. Some reached an all-time high, others crossed an all-time low and the ‘today’ column reflects their market capitalization as on 25th January 2022.
Additionally, in the global markets, the following stocks are significantly down since their IPO in 2021:
· Robinhood is down 60% since its IPO on 30th July
· Rivian is down 46% from its peak after listing on 19th November
· Nikola is trading below its SPAC price of $10, after touching a peak of $65.9 on 19th Jun 2020
India’s monetary policy is independent of the US Fed; however, the US is looked up to as the “Mother ship” and any winds of change in the US affect India too. Also, the markets tend to be coordinated with each other, given common large investors investing globally across the US, Europe, India, and Asia. We shared our thoughts on this linkage between the India and US markets last year, you can read about it here. We are already seeing the rate hikes starting to be factored in across Indian stocks as well.
There is going to be a new dimension for public market investors to evaluate and assess loss-making, high-growth, venture backed tech companies. Thus, some or most of these companies that went public over the last year could face deterioration in their stock price and re-rating of their market capitalization based on valuation multiples in the short term. Companies might also decide to look, before they leap to access the public markets. Hopefully, it doesn’t result in a pause to the flurry of funding for Indian start-ups right after we scratched the surface.
Conclusion
We are excited about the months ahead and are closely watching companies planning to raise their next round of early or growth stage financing. Whether they are soonicorns, unicorns, decacorns or have announced plans of going public.
Given the volatility in the public markets over the last couple of weeks, we wanted to re-iterate our thoughts and belief. The overall index and stocks across the broader markets might display a lot of weakness, however, like every time, businesses built on strong foundations and business models, will survive and in fact, thrive. The Indian economy is poised for massive value creation over the next decade and more with the key driver being the start-up ecosystem. A lot of start-ups in India seem exciting and promising, we think this could be the best year for start-ups accessing the public markets. Consumers are validating their business models by continuing to transact and increase their interactions with platforms such as Zomato to order food, Nykaa to shop for beauty and others in the essential category. Though there are differing views on profitability and valuation today, these businesses have changed the way India shops, transacts, and consumes content among other things. The risk appetite and liquidity will continue to be volatile due to various macro factors, however, the medium to long term view remains promising for India.
We look forward to sharing more of our thoughts and learnings in the coming months and learning from you about things we should include in the future, do write to us!
As tech flattens the world, brands have the ability to directly connect with consumers. Born on the internet and made big by digitally native millennials, these brands challenge big industry business models across the world.
One of the most bizarre tax provisions in recent times, 'angel tax' has been causing extreme heartburn and confusion within the startup community. And while the procedural change with the January 2019 notification is welcome, what needs to change are the rampant tax notices and coercive action against genuine startups who already run very boot-strapped operations.
Someone once said, “customer service isn’t about telling people how amazing you are, it’s about creating stories that do the talking for you.” Very few brands understand the value of these stories or even have the internal service culture to cultivate experiences worthy of being retold.
Are private equity firms 2 faced? How does the financial service sector deal with challenges? Read on to find out:
"Whatever ramp time you are budgeting for in terms of demand coming back - double it. However long you think you need cash for - double it." When this is over, companies that have been household names will disappear and a new crop will emerge. How you prepare and use resources today will determine which group you are in.
All eyes are now on economic activity to recover and catch up to the markets in terms of earnings. But until that day comes, we can continue to expect the unexpected and hopefully see the companies in our venture ecosystem finally achieve their holy grail of being publicly traded.
Why would Jio, a company that has rarely parted with ownership, agree to (or dare we say, actively seek out) partnerships and investments, and why now? What does this $20 BN mean for Jio, and how will these deals affect the broader technology market in India?
Will the Indian markets continue its love affair with the US markets? Are we ready to roll or are we riding the 2nd covid wave. How are the Indian markets still soaring admist the devastation caused by the 2nd wave? Find out!
Gradual change doesn't disrupt life. It wears a giant stealth cloak of business as usual, while being pregnant with disruption. And then, sudden change makes everyone sit up!
You will receive the next newsletter in your inbox.
The monthly Gazette is your source of happenings within Lightbox - updates, blogs, deep dives, opinion pieces and all things consumer tech
Join the thousands who hear from us