Key Takeaways
The offer was tempting—a chance to buy into Razorpay at a price that might be a shade lower than the fintech major’s last $7.5 billion valuation. With an IPO pencilled in for the next 12–18 months, it seemed like the kind of bet a secondaries investor would usually jump at.
But this one walked away.
Even at a discount, the price still felt “too much” for the secondaries-focused venture capital firm, especially if there was no clear path to a sustainable—and substantial—exit.
For funds in the secondaries business, timing is everything. They typically back companies that are no more than two years away from going public, with the aim of selling in the IPO or eventually after. And with dozens of Indian internet-first companies eyeing listings in the past 18 months, such deals have been on the rise. In fact, the government’s own Rs 10,000 crore Fund of Funds reportedly plans to focus on secondaries.
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