
After a strong funding streak in recent weeks, India’s startup ecosystem witnessed a slowdown as 18 startups raised $272.67 million, compared to 35 startups securing approximately the same amount last week. The contraction was sharper in deal volume, signalling investor caution despite continued backing of growth and pre-IPO stage companies.
In this article, we will delve into the key developments shaping India’s startup ecosystem this week — from funding patterns, sector and city-wise activity, and investor sentiment to fund launches, mergers and acquisitions, standout deals, strategic leadership moves, and emerging signals that indicate where the ecosystem is heading next.
Growth-Stage Funding: Ultraviolette Leads the Pack
Growth and late-stage companies attracted $112.36 million across five deals, with EV major Ultraviolette topping the chart after securing $45 million in its ongoing Series E round from Zoho Corporation and Lingotto.
Close behind, Atomberg, a consumer hardware startup, raised Rs 212 crore ($24 million) in an extended Series C led by Temasek’s Jongsong Investments. Other notable growth-stage deals included:
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StockGro, which secured Rs 150 crore
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Furlenco, raising $15 million
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Planys Technologies, closing with $11.1 million
The category continues to see steady momentum, driven largely by electric mobility, SaaS, and consumer tech-focused bets.
Early-Stage Surge: QWEEN’s $110 Mn Round Steals the Spotlight
Early-stage startups collectively secured $160.31 million across 12 deals, with luxury jewellery brand QWEEN emerging as the largest deal of the week after raising Rs 1,000 crore ($110 million) from Rosy Blue and Kashikey. The brand is now preparing to launch experiential retail stores in Bengaluru and Delhi by mid-February.
Other significant early-stage investments included:
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Finfactor, parent of account aggregator Finvu AA, raising $15 million in Series A
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Ambak (home loans), Moonrider (EV tractors), Modulus Housing (proptech) also securing capital
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Hospital chain Superhealth receiving funding from MS Dhoni’s family office and Panthera Peak Capital
The spike in seed and Series A activity underscores continued investor interest in innovation-driven, asset-light models despite macroeconomic headwinds.
Funding by City and Sectors
Bengaluru maintained its undisputed lead with nine deals, while Pune, Chennai and the Delhi-NCR region recorded two deals each. Mumbai, Bhubaneswar, and Chandigarh also made it to the charts.
Sector-wise, funding concentration was as follows:
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Fintech: 4 deals (largest contributor)
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E-commerce & EVs: 2 deals each
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Other categories included consumer tech, deeptech, proptech, and edtech.
Series-Wise Distribution
Series A dominated the week with four deals, followed by three seed investments. Series B and pre-Series A activity remained moderate with two deals each, while larger rounds like Series C, D and E continued but at a slower pace.
The eight-week moving average now stands at $327.37 million across 26 deals per week, suggesting this week’s dip may be temporary rather than a downturn trend.
Strategic Updates: Funds, Hiring, and M&A
Investor sentiment toward India remains resilient, reflected in new fund formation announcements:
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Fireside Ventures closed a Rs 2,265 crore ($253 million) fourth fund.
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Nexus Venture Partners raised a $700 million eighth fund focused on AI, enterprise tech, and fintech.
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Activate, a new AI-centric $75 million VC fund, launched by Aakrit Vaish and Pratyush Choudhury.
Meanwhile, Zaggle acquired Rivpe Technology, strengthening its fintech product suite.
Key leadership moves also shaped the week with appointments at Aspora, SpotDraft, and Catalyst Brands Business Services.
Market Movements & Major Announcements
The ecosystem also saw a flurry of headlines:
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PhonePe shut its B2C commerce app Pincode
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UPI processed 20.47 billion transactions in November
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Wakefit set its IPO price band at Rs 185–195
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TVS Motor reclaimed the No.1 position in the November E2W sales chart while Ola Electric slipped
Conclusion
While funding saw a dip this week, the activity across sectors, early-stage momentum, new VC funds, and leadership restructuring signal an ecosystem preparing for a strong 2025. With major IPOs lined up and investor confidence steady, India’s innovation economy continues to build its next wave of growth stories.

