In a decisive move signaling deeper integration into India’s burgeoning startup ecosystem, 360 ONE Asset, the asset management arm of 360 ONE WAM, has announced the launch of a ₹500 crore (approximately $60 million) early-stage venture capital fund. This fund forms a part of the firm’s expansive ₹25,000 crore private equity platform, underlining its ambition to become a significant force in backing India’s next generation of entrepreneurs.
The newly launched fund is sector-agnostic but sharply focused on high-impact, high-growth verticals including consumer technology, fintech infrastructure, generative AI, spacetech, defence, and advanced manufacturing. These sectors represent the cutting edge of innovation and are widely expected to drive India’s digital and industrial transformation over the coming decade.
Designed to address a structural gap in India’s capital ecosystem, the strategy behind this fund aims to bridge the chasm between nimble micro-VCs and sprawling global investment giants. 360 ONE Asset plans to provide sustained capital from the first institutional round through to later stages, adopting a high-ownership approach that includes active participation at the board level. This model not only delivers capital but also deep strategic engagement, ensuring startups receive the long-term support they need to scale responsibly and rapidly.
The move reflects a growing recognition among established asset managers of the value and potential of early-stage innovation. By weaving venture capital into its broader private equity framework, 360 ONE Asset is positioning itself as a full-spectrum partner to high-potential businesses from inception to maturity.
As India’s startup ecosystem matures and begins to rival those in more developed markets, funds like this one represent a vital source of institutional capital that can match vision with execution. For founders navigating the critical early stages of growth—especially in capital-intensive or frontier sectors—the presence of a robust, engaged backer could be the difference between surviving and scaling.