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A Junior VC (AJVC), the venture capital firm has completed the final close of its debut fund at over Rs 200 crore — more than twice its initial target of Rs 100 crore. The pre-seed investor had earlier reached its first close at Rs 100 crore in March 2024.
The debut fund, launched in September 2024, drew support from global institutional investors, leading Indian family offices, high-net-worth individuals, and startup founders. AJVC plans to use the corpus to back early-stage Indian startups.
The firm plans to support another 60–70 startups over the next few years, with a particular focus on artificial intelligence and consumer technology. Its applicant pool already spans over 50 cities, 6,000 colleges, and 4,000 companies, reflecting the growing demand for pre-seed capital across diverse regions.
Speaking on the close, Bhatnagar said the fund was heavily oversubscribed but capped at nearly Rs 165 crore to remain disciplined. He noted that India is experiencing an unprecedented wave of first-time entrepreneurs, which requires venture capital to operate with much greater speed and efficiency.
Beyond capital, AJVC differentiates itself by offering a 600,000-strong founder community, structured resources worth Rs 4 crore, and peer-led programs that help startups accelerate customer acquisition and learning. This infrastructure, the firm claims, is designed to make early-stage funding faster, more transparent, and more supportive than traditional venture processes.
The firm’s recent investments include Nuyug, a celebration-focused jewellery brand, and Mithila Foods, an FMCG startup working on Bihar-based packaged food products. AJVC typically invests around Rs 1.5 crore at the pre-seed stage, acquiring early equity stakes in startups across SaaS, AI, consumer tech, consumer brands, and B2B segments.
The momentum around AJVC’s debut comes as early-stage investing gains renewed traction in India. According to industry data, early-stage deal value grew 18% year-on-year in the first half of 2025, crossing $188 million across 104 transactions. Artificial intelligence, in particular, has emerged as a top priority for both early and growth-stage investors.
The oversubscribed close also underscores a broader trend of global and domestic investors shifting earlier in the funding cycle. With over $3.2 billion raised by Indian VC firms so far in 2025—already surpassing the full-year total of 2024—the market signals growing institutionalisation of pre-seed investing, setting the stage for a deeper pipeline of venture-backed startups.