img

The Indian Growth Story [2023 Update]

The distribution of deposits in scheduled commercial banks(SCBs) across the Indian economy reaffirms that India is fundamentally an ascending world country. 1. Households make up the majority of deposits, a whopping 61.95%, close to ₹11,792,507 crores in SCBs. It appears that Indian Households are poised as significant potential consumers. It will be interesting to see how startups position themselves towards B2C services and product offerings that appeal to this sector. 2. There is also a significant gender split, with deposits from women roughly being a fifth of the total (20.49%), close to ₹3,900,593 crores. This represents a sizeable yet underutilised female demographic, a growth opportunity waiting to be tapped for startups. Women centric consumption will become a macro trend as a second order effect. Think maternity care, female hygiene, beauty, women-centric fashion and more. 3. Importantly, the majority of deposits are held in urban and metropolitan centres, cumulating to around 76% of all deposits (around ₹15,270,500 crores). It was always obvious that the highest revenue opportunity is in the Indian Metro scene. There exists mainstream relevance and aspiration for folks outside of these spaces. The road to higher likelihood of growth and profitability leads through the Indian Metro. 4. Large deposits for the Non-Financial Corporations at around ₹32,611,52 crores or 17.13% presents an uncanny duality. On one hand, these corporations are likely competition for startups. But? On the other hand, they can also be viewed as potential clients. B2B startups that offer valuable services to these corporations, such as SaaS solutions, stand to gain from this. 5. The Financial Corporations section, represents 5.84% of total deposits (₹1,111,565 crores) It creates an opportunity for FinTech startups seeking to disrupt or foster partnerships. Link to RBI data: https://dbie.rbi.org.in/DBIE/dbie.rbi?site=BsrPublications#!21

img

AlphaGrindset

Series A Startup

a year ago

img

salt

Gojek

a year ago

img

Kamlesh

Stealth

a year ago

Sign in to a Grapevine account for the full experience.

Discover More

Curated from across

img

Office Gossip on

by Learn_

Stealth

Rant or is it ?

Absolutely sad to see the state of the startups, most of them. I am a founder myself, and this is a post with equal disappointment with myself as much as it is for anyone else who relates. Look at all these companies that have raised shit tons of capital, and now make a fraction of money that has been invested in them. The raised money is spent on outsized, non business sense making acquisition costs, only to keep repeating it till the tap runs dry. Then when all stakeholders get bored, the service quality plummets, the employees are fired and whole sectors are admonished as being bad. But, my question is, which sector where large sums of money was invested in early days have come out with flying colours. Fucking nothing ! Edtech, proptech, agritech, ecommerce etc. etc. etc. kuch bhi nahi. Is there any sector where a startup which has raised in the 100s of millions in the first 5 years have actually built a sustainable business at any scale ? Then scaling down, isse acha, scale slowly. The worst part of this whole drama, is pushing the innovation wheel backward and destroying customer sentiment. Isse acha, raise less money inititally, build slowly, and only scale when the market is ready. Artifical growth makes no sense, unless you have a treasure chest that shall never run out. Even in that case, spend the money on assets and not on random acquisition costs, direct or indirect. As founders, let's do better, nahi ?

img

Indian Startups on

by salt

Gojek

[Thread] Why 2024 is going to be a massive hit for the ecosystem?

As we bid farewell to the challenges of the past, let's delve into why 2024 is poised to be a game-changer for the Indian Startups! 🚀 In 2020, the world weathered the storm of COVID, followed by unprecedented quantitative easing. We then saw that in 2021 the bull run came soaring. Investors, fueled by the appetite for riskier assets led to a funding boom for startups as salaries soared. Fast forward to 2022, and the music is about to stop. The realization that the Fed would hike rates to curb inflation means that funding is about to dry up as big money will be invested away into debt/T-Bills. Though demand remained robust, the stock market felt the impact as JPow raised the interest rates. Late 2022 and 2023 saw the tech landscape experiencing layoffs, and startups facing significant headwinds. It’s a wonder if anyone raised this year. But here's the twist—2024 looks brighter. The stock markets have rebounded to all-time highs, signaling that things may be on the rise. Despite geopolitical tensions in Ukraine and Iraq, the macro outlook for India shines bright. For Indian Startups? VC Funding is still here to stay. So keep your heads down and keep building. From what I am hearing, it is set to make a roaring comeback. There is now significant rationality in the funding ecosystem leading to realistic valuations. However, this revival will come with a plot twist. Newer companies, fueled by fresh funding, are set to rise, while most of the lofty valuations of those who raised in 2021 are about to crash and burn. So buckle up folks. Let’s see where it takes us. What do you think? 🤔