IVCA forms new VC Council, Rajan Anandan named chairman
时间:2024-06-26 12:15:54 阅读(143)
Indian Venture and Alternate Capital Association (IVCA), the apex industry body for alternative assets, has formed a new VC Council for 2022-2024. It will be chaired by Rajan Anandan, managing director of Sequoia India and Southeast Asia and Surge, and co-chaired by Rahul Khanna, co-founder and managing partner of Trifecta Capital.
Also Read: India-focused VC & PE funds raise record $14.1 bn in H1CY22
Also Read: VC funding in India to remain muted over coming quarters: KPMG
The council functions as a permanent sub-committee under the aegis of the IVCA executive committee. The new council aims to continue driving government engagement by advocating for policies that encourage innovation which contributes to capital creation, nation building and knowledge dissemination. These elements work in tandem to offer governance and advocacy support to strengthen the ecosystem by supporting young and first-time fund managers. “The supply of capital from venture investors as well as the continued improvement on the policy and regulatory fronts have helped boost India’s start-up ecosystem. We will support maturing of this asset class by providing access to best practices in capital formation, portfolio management, governance and reporting,” said Khanna.
猜你喜欢
- Global Markets- Shares drift lower as bond yields climb and yen tumbles
- Gold fails to shine as prices for the safe-haven asset slip despite Fitch Ratings’ downgrade
- 50% of MSME credit gap in low, middle-income nations can be closed by digital public infra- Report
- ATF price cut by 4 pc; commercial LPG rate reduced marginally by Rs 1
- Adani Enterprises share price jumps 15% today, hits upper circuit; group stocks m-cap back above Rs 10 lakh cr
- 75 years of Independence- Sensex from 100 to 59000, gauge for an undervalued stock called India
- Assam floods- These images show you the grim situation in state
- Gold falls Rs 80; silver plunge Rs 390
- Gold clocks gains as dollar slips, Fed chair speech eyed; traders should buy on dips, go long around Rs 58,000