AIFs Hit Rs 15.7 Trillion, SEBI Chief Urges More Startup Funding

Alternative Investment Funds have become a crucial pillar of India's capital markets, with commitments reaching approximately Rs 15.7 trillion as of December 2025. SEBI Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey highlighted the industry's rapid growth but pointed out a significant gap, with only about Rs 205 billion deployed in startups. He emphasized the need for stronger governance, credible valuations, and more capital directed towards innovation-led sectors. The regulator is also facilitating growth by exploring faster scheme launches and noted a sharp rise in accredited investors.

Key Points: AIFs at Rs 15.7 Trillion: SEBI on Growth & Startup Funding Gap

  • Rs 15.7 trillion in AIF commitments
  • Only Rs 205 billion invested in startups
  • Risk profiling & valuation integrity stressed
  • Accredited investors surge to 2,181
  • SEBI exploring "lodge and launch" model
3 min read

AIFs emerge as key pillar of India's capital markets with Rs 15.7 trillion in commitments: SEBI Chairman

SEBI Chairman reveals AIF commitments hit Rs 15.7 trillion, with a 30% CAGR, but calls for more capital in startups and stronger governance.

"The real test will be whether growth is matched by stronger governance, deeper innovation capital, and greater trust. - SEBI Chairman"

New Delhi, March 11

Alternative investment funds have transitioned from the margins of the financial system to become an important pillar of India's capital markets, connecting capital with sectors that require it most. Addressing the IVCA Conclave 2026 in Mumbai on Wednesday, Sebi Chairman Tuhin Kanta Pandey stated that the current geopolitical situation serves as a reminder that capital must do more than chase returns. "It must also build resilience," he noted, adding that for India, this creates a larger role for the AIF industry to finance sectors like renewables, logistics, and strategic manufacturing.

"India now has more than 1700 registered AIFs. As of December 2025, commitments stood at about Rs 15.7 trillion and investments at about Rs 6.45 trillion, a CAGR of close to 30% over the last five years. The AIF industry is not only attracting commitments, but it's also converting a growing share of these commitments into actual investment. This capital is being put to work in the economy. At the same time, the commitments standing at close to Rs 16 trillion, there remains substantial capacity for future deployment," Pandey said.

"However, as of December 31, 2025, only about Rs 205 billion of AIF capital has gone to startups. If private capital stays too conservative, the core purpose of the AIF framework is lost. The industry can do much more to back innovation-led sectors and emerging businesses," the Chairman remarked.

He also highlighted that "the potential of higher returns cannot be separated from the disclosure of higher risks" and insisted that risk profiling must become a real discipline rather than a "box-ticking exercise."

Valuation integrity was identified as another critical area for the industry. The Chairman pointed out that AIFs often invest in early-stage and illiquid assets where credibility begins with valuation. "Weak or opaque valuations erode confidence," he said, warning that "valuation concerns can distort price discovery and weaken trust" as companies move toward public markets.

He stressed that "fair valuation matters" and noted that "growth must be accompanied by standards that are non-negotiable."

On the regulatory front, Sebi is exploring a "lodge and launch" model to facilitate faster and more efficient scheme launches. "For certain AIF schemes, reliance can be placed on due diligence certificates from merchant bankers," the Chairman explained.

He also noted a sharp increase in accredited investors, rising from 649 in May 2025 to 2,181 as of February 2026. "The number of accredited investors has increased sharply... and these hold now close to 30% of the total AIF investments," he stated.

"The AIF industry has a major role to play in India's growth story. But scale alone will not be enough. The real test will be whether growth is matched by stronger governance, deeper innovation capital, and greater trust. That's the direction in which SEBI will continue to engage with the industry. Our shared task is clear. To build an AIF ecosystem that is credible and aligned with India's long term development," the Chairman said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
The point about only Rs 205 billion going to startups is concerning. The whole idea of alternative funds is to fund innovation, not just safe bets. If AIFs are too conservative, we'll lose the next generation of Indian unicorns to foreign VCs. Hope SEBI's push works.
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Priya S
As someone who works in finance, the 'lodge and launch' model is a welcome step. The regulatory process can be a bottleneck. Faster launches mean capital reaches businesses quicker. Also, the sharp rise in accredited investors shows growing financial sophistication among HNIs. Good direction!
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Rohit P
Valuation integrity is the key point here. We've seen too many startups with inflated valuations that crash later. If AIFs want long-term trust, they must get valuations right from the start. "Box-ticking" risk profiling helps no one. Strong governance is non-negotiable.
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Vikram M
While the growth is impressive, I hope this doesn't become another avenue only for the wealthy. The article says accredited investors hold 30% of investments. The real test will be if this industry can also create products for the common retail investor to participate in India's growth story.
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Michael C
Interesting to see India's AIF market maturing. The focus on sectors like logistics and renewables aligns with global ESG trends. The scale is becoming significant. If governance keeps pace, this could attract even more foreign capital looking for sustainable, long-term plays in a growing economy.

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