The venture capital landscape across Asia-Pacific and India remained an active arena this week, with capital flowing into sectors ranging from quantum-magnetic sensing and cybersecurity to supply chain logistics, digital healthcare, and D2C consumer brands.
India's startup ecosystem experienced a sharp week-on-week correction — raising a combined $60.4 million across 15 deals, an 83% drop from the $361.5 million raised the prior week. Yet even in a subdued week, standout raises in smart metering infrastructure, travel tech, and AI analytics signal that fundamentals remain strong. Across the broader APAC region, investors continued backing high-conviction bets in deep tech and fintech.
India Funding Roundup
India's homegrown smart metering leader secured ₹710 crore from British International Investment (BII) for its subsidiary Hooghly Smart Metering. The funds will deploy over 22 lakh smart meters across West Bengal, expanding its advanced metering infrastructure network.
India's leading backpacker hostel chain raised its Series B co-led by PROMAFT Partners and V3 Ventures, with participation from ITI Growth Opportunities Fund and Merisis Wealth Trust. The capital will accelerate expansion across India and the Middle East.
AI-powered brand analytics platform GobbleCube raised its Series A led by Susquehanna Venture Capital, with InfoEdge Ventures and Kae Capital participating. The platform helps consumer brands make sense of complex e-commerce datasets.
Ahmedabad-based premium ice cream brand HOCCO raised ₹100 crore led by Sauce.vc, valuing the company at ₹2,500 crore. The funds will expand production from 2.5 to 4 lakh litres/day and scale distribution beyond North and West India. FY26 net sales crossed ₹530 crore.
Enterprise background verification platform TraqCheck raised $8 million led by IvyCap Ventures with IIFL participating. The startup will expand into Europe, scale its AI screening tool "Trace," and launch "Nina" — a real-time AI hiring assistant for conversational sourcing.
Energy tech & IoT solutions provider Aliste Technologies secured ₹30 crore led by Big Global JSC, with YourNest Venture Capital and HBeon Labs also participating. Funds will strengthen R&D in energy-focused solutions and improve distribution networks.
Industrial AI startup Intellithink raised ₹17 crore led by Pentathlon Ventures (₹6.5 Cr via India Fund II), with Anicut Capital and Veltis Capital joining. Its flagship product Intellivibe uses AI and proprietary sensors to detect machine faults for clients including Jindal Steel, JSW Steel, and Adani.
Next-generation homegrown fragrance brand FIFTH SENSE raised ₹6.3 crore to scale India's premium perfume market. The D2C brand is positioning itself against global players by combining Indian olfactory traditions with contemporary luxury packaging.
Mumbai-based brain health platform Ivory raised $1 million from Draper Associates, SAGE Venture Fund, IFCI Ventures, and SIDBI. Known from Shark Tank India, the company offers neuroscience-based cognitive screening, recently partnering with Metropolis Healthcare.
Residential rental platform Helium raised ₹5 crore in an angel round backed by prominent founders including Albinder Dhindsa (Blinkit), Kunal Shah (CRED), Pankaj Chaddah, and Nitin Gupta. The platform focuses on gated society apartment rentals.
Asia-Pacific Roundup
Founded by Israeli entrepreneurs operating in the US market, Artemis Security's $70M raise from Felicis is one of the largest Series A rounds in cybersecurity this year. It underscores the accelerating demand for defensive tech infrastructure as digital threats grow more sophisticated.
YC-backed Phonely, positioning itself as a leader in automated communications, raised its Series A led by Base10 Partners. Total funding now reaches $19 million. The platform is disrupting traditional customer service models through AI-powered voice automation.
Saudi Arabia's fashion-tech sector is gaining momentum. Aya's successful Series A demonstrates that localised e-commerce platforms with strong regional value propositions are effectively capturing market share in the Middle East's rapidly expanding digital retail segment.
New Zealand-based Caruso is revolutionising registry and fund administration through AI, reaching a $50 million valuation. A prime example of how niche "boring business" sectors — compliance, fund admin, registry — are becoming high-margin tech hubs for venture investment.
Indonesian logistics startup Baskit is digitising the country's fragmented supply chain industry. Backed by Cento Ventures, it is well-positioned to bring efficiency to traditional Indonesian distribution networks — a market with significant structural inefficiencies ripe for disruption.
Australian-based Deteqt's seed round for quantum-magnetic sensors — backed by Main Sequence — is proof that deep tech is no longer merely theoretical. High-barrier-to-entry sectors with long R&D cycles continue to attract forward-thinking capital from specialised venture firms.
The digital health space continues to grow, particularly in mental health and addiction recovery. Clean Slate Clinic's funding reflects a broader APAC shift toward online-first, accessible medical support systems — a segment that grew rapidly post-pandemic and is now attracting institutional capital.
Singapore-based OrtCloud's pre-seed from Golden Gate Ventures confirms that even at the earliest stages, cloud infrastructure companies command attention from top-tier investors. Singapore remains Asia's premier hub for cloud and SaaS innovation, buoyed by its regulatory clarity and talent density.
Egyptian fintech startup INVIA rounds out this week's APAC deals, having attracted angel investors and strategic supporters. INVIA is bridging the gap in financial services access across North Africa — highlighting the growing maturity of an ecosystem long underserved by traditional venture capital.
Key Trends to Watch
Whether in fintech, cybersecurity, industrial monitoring, or HR tech, AI is now the primary value driver across every funded startup this week. India alone saw $23M flow into pure AI deals.
Startups in Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Indonesia, and India's Tier 2 cities are successfully closing institutional rounds by solving regionally-specific problems at scale — not just imitating Western models.
Despite market corrections elsewhere, investors are still writing high-conviction cheques for quantum sensing (Deteqt), energy IoT (Aliste), and industrial AI (Intellithink) — sectors with high barriers and long runways.
Polaris Smart Metering's ₹710 Cr raise from BII is emblematic of a broader trend: international institutional capital is now actively backing India's public infrastructure buildout — smart meters, energy grids, and logistics networks.