Peak XV, the largest India and Southeast Asia-focused venture firm, is reducing the size of some of its funds and lowering fees as it seeks to become “deeply aligned” with its limited partners.
The firm, which raised $2.85 billion funds in mid-2022, informed its backers on Tuesday evening that it would cut $465 million from its 2022 vintage funds, according to an investor letter seen by TechCrunch.
The venture capital group is scaling back its growth and multi-stage funds, while also trimming its economic structure for these vehicles to a baseline of 2% management fee and 20% carried interest, down from 2.5% and 30% respectively.
Peak XV will maintain provisions to catch up on carried interest up to 30% after achieving a 3x distributed to paid-in capital ratio, the letter stated. The economics for its seed and venture-focused funds remain unchanged.
This move comes more than a year after Peak XV’s separation from Sequoia. The storied venture firm said it was splitting from its China and India-Southeast Asia units to avoid conflicts and confusions amid geopolitical tensions between Washington and Beijing.
The decision reflects a broader trend in the venture capital industry, where many firms have either reduced fund sizes or struggled to raise their target amounts in recent years following a correction after a 13-year bull run in the tech sector.
Peak XV’s rationale stems from growing apprehension about the frothy public market performance in India and a perceived dearth of venture-scale opportunities in the immediate future. It wrote in the letter that it remains bullish about the region.
Macquarie analysts recently noted that India’s price-to-earnings ratio stands at about 21 times, compared with 10 times for emerging markets overall, 14.5 times for global markets, 17 times for the US, and 8 times for China. Notably, India has witnessed more tech initial public offerings this year than the US.
Peak XV began its journey in India more than a decade ago. The firm firm has made a realized and unrealized gains of $10 billion to date, it disclosed in the letter. Since the seperation with Sequoia last year, it has made about $1.2 billion in exits, TechCrunch reported last week.
Peak XV’s dominant position in the region has drawn both praise and criticism. The firm’s Surge program, which offers favorable terms and extensive resources to early-stage startups, has become a coveted launchpad for young startups in India and Southeast Asia, somewhat eclipsing the appeal of Y Combinator’s offering.
The venture capital group earlier this year unveiled plans for a perpetual fund backed by its own partners. Since its inception, Peak XV has amassed $9 billion in assets under management, with an additional $2 billion yet to be deployed. Its portfolio spans more than 400 companies, including over 50 unicorns and about 40 businesses with annual revenues surpassing $100 million.
Since 2020, 15 of its portfolio companies have listed on public markets, outpacing other India-focused venture funds.
This is a developing story. More to follow.