Weekly Startup Funding News: Indian Startup Funding Slumps 69%, But Mega Deals Change The Narrative
Despite a string of upbeat announcements at the ongoing India AI Impact Summit, fresh capital inflow into the Indian startup ecosystem slowed sharply this week. Between February 16 and 20, 16 homegrown startups collectively raised $118.3 million — marking a steep 69% drop from the $200.2 million secured across 31 deals in the preceding week.
However, the broader funding picture tells a slightly more optimistic story.
When factoring in the $170 million Series G round raised by Spinny on February 14 — which was skipped in last week’s tally — total funding for the period surged 42% week-on-week to $285.3 million. The mega deal significantly altered the narrative, underlining how a single large round can skew ecosystem-wide numbers.
Spinny Drives Ecommerce Dominance
Ecommerce emerged as the biggest beneficiary of investor capital this week, thanks to Spinny’s $170 million round led by Fidelity Investments and Accel. The vertical marketplace continues to consolidate its position in the used-car segment, and the scale of the round reaffirmed investor confidence in well-established consumer internet brands.
Without Spinny’s contribution, however, funding activity would have appeared far more subdued — reflecting cautious capital deployment trends across early- and growth-stage startups.
Advanced Hardware & Deeptech Gain Momentum
While ecommerce dominated in dollar terms, the advanced hardware & technology segment led in deal volume. Four startups in this category collectively raised $26 million, highlighting growing investor interest in deeptech, semiconductor innovation, defence tech, and climate-focused hardware.
Notable raises included:
C2i Semiconductors ($15 million Series A)
Vervesemi ($10 million Series A)
CoreShield Technologies (Seed round)
Intrinsic Foundries ($1.4 million Seed round)
The trend indicates a steady pivot toward strategic sectors such as semiconductor manufacturing, defence technology, and climate innovation — areas increasingly aligned with India’s long-term industrial ambitions.
AI & Enterprise Tech Continue Steady Flow
AI and enterprise tech startups clocked three deals each this week. AI startups collectively secured $23 million, while enterprise tech ventures brought in $30 million.
Among the notable deals:
Portkey raised $15 million in a Series A round.
Myelin Foundry secured $5.3 million.
CraftifAI raised $3 million in a seed round.
The application-layer AI ecosystem remains active, though deal sizes were relatively moderate compared to global AI funding waves. Investors appear selective, backing startups with strong enterprise use cases and monetisation clarity.
B2C Takes The Lion’s Share, But B2B Dominates In Numbers
Interestingly, B2C startups accounted for nearly 70% of total capital deployed this week, largely influenced by Spinny and fintech player Stable Money’s $25 million Pre-Series C round.
Yet in terms of deal count, B2B startups clearly dominated. Thirteen B2B startups secured funding, underscoring sustained investor preference for enterprise-focused, revenue-driven models amid tighter capital conditions.
This contrast reflects a broader trend: while big B2C brands can command large cheques, most new capital is flowing into B2B and infrastructure-driven innovation.
Peak XV & Tenacity Lead Investor Activity
Peak XV Partners and Tenacity Ventures emerged as the most active investors this week, backing two startups each.
Peak XV not only participated in funding rounds but also made headlines with major fund announcements. The firm unveiled three maiden independent funds — India Seed, India Venture, and APAC Funds — marking its first independent fundraising exercise after separating from Sequoia Capital in 2023. It closed commitments worth $1.3 billion across these funds.
Meanwhile, Tenacity Ventures continued its active deployment strategy, supporting deeptech and clean-tech startups.
Fund Announcements Signal Long-Term Optimism
Even as weekly funding dipped, new fund launches and capital commitments painted a far more bullish long-term picture.
Key updates include:
OTP Ventures closing its maiden ₹500 crore fund.
ValleyNXT Ventures launching a ₹200 crore deeptech-focused fund with a greenshoe option.
Equirus Group closing its ₹166 crore early-stage VC fund.
General Catalyst announcing plans to invest $5 billion in Indian startups over five years.
Qualcomm committing $150 million through Qualcomm Ventures for AI-led innovation.
AI infrastructure startup Neysa announcing a $1.2 billion combined equity and debt round.
These developments suggest that while weekly fluctuations may signal caution, dry powder remains substantial.

The Bigger Picture: Selective, Not Silent
The week’s data reflects a funding ecosystem that is selective rather than stagnant. Investors are backing category leaders, deeptech innovators, and enterprise-focused startups with clearer revenue pathways.
Mega rounds like Spinny’s can temporarily inflate funding numbers, but underlying activity shows disciplined capital allocation. With new funds closing and global players committing billions to India, the pipeline for future investments appears robust.
In short, while the week may have looked subdued at first glance, the structural momentum within India’s startup ecosystem remains intact — and potentially primed for a stronger rebound in the coming quarters.
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