Investor Insights

MUFG Strengthens Commitment to Indian Startups with $250 Million Fund

MUFG Strengthens Commitment to Indian Startups with $250 Million Fund

Japanese banking giant Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG) is significantly expanding its footprint in India’s startup ecosystem with a dedicated $250 million fund** targeting early and growth-stage companies, with a strong focus on **fintech** . The corpus has the potential to be scaled up to **$400 million .

This move represents one of the most significant commitments by a global financial institution to India’s startup landscape in recent months and comes at a pivotal time when other major investors have pulled back.


📊 Fund at a Glance

AspectDetails
Fund Size$250 million (expandable to $400 million)
Primary FocusFintech (early and growth-stage)
Fund ManagerMayank Shiromani (Deputy CIO, MUFG Innovation Partners)
Previous Vehicle$300 million Ganesha Fund (growth-stage focus)
Notable Portfolio CompaniesJupiter, DMI Finance, Dhan, Olyv, Skydo, AppsForBharat, Safe Security, Atlys, Snabbit, Battery Smart

📈 Why This Matters: Filling the VC Vacuum

The launch of MUFG’s India fund comes at a critical juncture. A new wave of investors is stepping up to fill the void left by the sharp slowdown in deal-making from once-dominant players like SoftBank and Tiger Global .

Investor2021 Deals2022 Deals2025 Deals2026 (YTD)
Tiger Global554760
SoftBank17400

Source: Venture Intelligence 

MUFG is now part of a cohort of new active investors—including Susquehanna Asia VC, Enrission India Capital, SMBC Asia Rising Fund, and Mirae Asset Global Investments—that have been sustaining or stepping up activity in India since 2025 .

“Right now, because others are not active, we are getting much better deals. That is why we feel this is the right time to double down.”
— Puneet Kumar, CEO, Mirae Asset Venture Investments 


🎯 Strategic Focus: Fintech First

MUFG has been investing in Indian fintech startups through its $300 million Ganesha Fund since 2022, primarily focusing on growth-stage deals . The new fund, to be led by Mayank Shiromani (Deputy Chief Investment Officer at MUFG Innovation Partners), will broaden the firm’s strategy to include earlier-stage companies .

The timing is strategic. Investors deploying capital now believe:

  • Valuations have corrected to more realistic levels
  • Competition for deals has reduced significantly
  • India’s digital consumption habits are mature enough for startups to scale with less capital 

💡 Investor Sentiment: The Great Indian Digital Leap

The shift in investor confidence is driven by India’s demonstrated digital maturity. The digital habits built over the past decade by companies such as Zomato, Swiggy, PhonePe, Groww, Meesho, and Zepto have become mainstream, creating a fertile ground for the next generation of startups to scale with greater capital efficiency .

This is not merely a short-term tactical shift but part of a broader strategic realignment of Japanese capital toward India, driven by:

  • India’s large domestic market and rising incomes
  • Government initiatives boosting domestic production in electronics, semiconductors, renewable energy, and advanced manufacturing
  • India’s emergence as a potential hub for semiconductor manufacturing and data centre infrastructure

The growing banking presence is increasingly viewed as part of a larger India-Japan economic corridor, with Japanese banks positioning themselves to finance trade, investment, M&A, and infrastructure projects connecting the two economies .

🔮 What This Means for Indian Startups

MUFG’s expanded commitment signals several key trends:

TrendImplication
Deepened Capital PoolIncreased availability of patient, strategic capital from global financial institutions
Fintech ValidationStrong vote of confidence in India’s digital lending, payments, and wealth management sectors
Shift to Early-StageMore capital available for Series A and B rounds, addressing a critical funding gap
Japan-India CorridorPotential for increased cross-border partnerships, acquisitions, and market access

MUFG’s Ganesha Fund has already invested close to $100 million in Indian fintech startups. The new fund is expected to significantly accelerate this deployment while broadening the firm’s exposure to earlier-stage innovation

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