General Catalyst, a venture capital firm based in Silicon Valley, has revealed plans to invest $5 billion in India over the next five years, significantly boosting its involvement in the country’s startup landscape, just under two years after joining forces with the local venture firm Venture Highway.
This commitment, announced at the India AI Impact Summit in New Delhi on February 20, will focus on startups across sectors, including AI, healthcare, defence technology, fintech, and consumer technology. This announcement represents a substantial increase from the previously allocated $500 million to $1 billion for investments in India.
“India will build the next generation of global platform companies,” General Catalyst CEO Hemant Taneja said, adding that the firm sees Indian founders as uniquely positioned to develop technology for markets serving enormous populations.
“India’s IT talent is well-positioned to lead the AI era. India is the world’s largest IT exporter and employs 5.8 million people. The engineers and operators who built global delivery at scale are now best positioned to engage customers directly and drive innovation at the application layer,” he wrote in a LinkedIn post.
Taneja also believes that AI can drive abundance in health and education for everyone. India’s opportunity is AI diffusion at the population scale.
He said that Neeraj Arora, General Catalyst’s CEO for India, the Middle East, and North Africa, “has built something extraordinary across India and MENA—same platform, same ambition, same accountability as anywhere else GC operates. This commitment continues what he and the team set out to build when Venture Highway merged with GC.”
General Catalyst has been expanding its portfolio in India by focusing on areas such as rapid delivery e-commerce, health technology, and deep technology. Their investments include companies like Zepto, PB Health, Raphe, Jeh Aerospace, Pronto, and Ayr Energy.
General Catalyst is creating a framework to enhance large-scale AI adoption in key sectors in India, aiming to transition pilot projects into full deployments. Their General Catalyst Institute is also fostering government-industry partnerships in the country.