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Nandan Nilekani steps down as Fundamentum GP as firm launches $200M third fund

BitcoinWorld Nandan Nilekani steps down as Fundamentum GP as firm launches $200M third fund Nandan Nilekani, the co-founder of Indian IT giant Infosys and a key architect of the country’s dig

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
July 9, 2026
5 min read
NEWS
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BitcoinWorldNandan Nilekani steps down as Fundamentum GP as firm launches $200M third fund

Nandan Nilekani, the co-founder of Indian IT giant Infosys and a key architect of the country’s digital identity and payments infrastructure, is stepping down as a general partner at Fundamentum Partnership, the venture capital firm he co-founded in 2017. The leadership change coincides with Fundamentum’s launch of its third fund, which is targeting approximately $200 million.

A transition in role, not influence

Nilekani will remain deeply involved with the firm as its anchor investor and will continue advising portfolio companies and mentoring founders, according to co-founder Sanjeev Aggarwal. Aggarwal described the shift as largely a title change, emphasizing that Nilekani’s strategic guidance remains integral to Fundamentum’s operations. “The one thing that he enjoys the most is mentoring the teams that we back, and he will continue to do so in Fund III,” Aggarwal told Bitcoin World.

Nilekani, 71, is widely recognized for leading the creation of Aadhaar, India’s biometric identity system, and for championing the Unified Payments Interface (UPI), a real-time payments network used by hundreds of millions of Indians. He has also been a vocal advocate for the Open Network for Digital Commerce (ONDC), an initiative aimed at making e-commerce more open and interoperable in the country.

Fund III: Strategy and leadership

Fundamentum’s third fund will be led by Aggarwal alongside Prateek Jain, who joined the firm at its inception in 2017; fintech investor Mayank Kachhwaha; and finance chief Sanjay Chaturvedi. The fund aims to back eight to 10 early-stage startups building consumer technology, fintech, and AI products, issuing initial checks of approximately $10.5 million each. Aggarwal said the firm has already begun deploying capital and expects the fundraising to conclude over the next 12 to 18 months.

Notably, Nilekani has made his largest-ever commitment to a venture capital fund for Fund III, though the exact amount was not disclosed. The fund expects to raise roughly half of its target from international investors, with the remainder coming from Indian institutions, family offices, founders, and the firm’s partners.

India’s evolving venture capital landscape

Aggarwal highlighted how the fundraising reflects a broader shift in India’s venture capital ecosystem. “When we launched Helion, there was no domestic capital in the country, and all the capital was raised from the U.S.,” he said, referring to his earlier firm Helion Venture Partners. “Over the last five years, we are experiencing very strong interest in Indian investors to back venture capital firms. Now you can build a venture firm with domestic capital.”

Fundamentum’s portfolio includes used-car marketplace Spinny, online pharmacy PharmEasy, audio storytelling platform Kuku FM, and AppsForBharat, the developer of the Sri Mandir devotional app. The firm has made 17 investments across its first two funds and has returned about half of the capital from its first fund to investors.

AI focus and the India opportunity

Aggarwal told Bitcoin World that Fundamentum sees India’s biggest AI opportunity in applications built on existing global models, particularly across financial services, content, and vernacular consumer applications. This stance underscores how much of India’s AI ecosystem centers on application-layer startups rather than those developing frontier AI models, a contrast to the U.S. and China, where companies have attracted billions of dollars to build AI models.

The leadership reshuffle follows the departure of general partner Ashish Kumar, who recently launched AI-focused venture fund Fundamentum Frontier Advisors (F2A), which also has Nilekani as an anchor investor. F2A is a separate firm with no operational connection to Fundamentum, and Kumar is not involved in Fund III.

Conclusion

Nandan Nilekani’s transition from general partner to anchor investor and advisor at Fundamentum Partnership marks a natural evolution for the firm as it enters its third fund with a $200 million target. The move reflects both the maturation of India’s venture capital ecosystem and the growing role of domestic capital in funding the country’s next generation of technology startups. Fundamentum’s focus on application-layer AI and consumer technology positions it to capitalize on India’s expanding digital economy.

FAQs

Q1: Will Nandan Nilekani still be involved with Fundamentum Partnership?Yes. Nilekani is stepping down as a general partner but will remain the anchor investor for Fund III and will continue advising the firm and mentoring portfolio companies.

Q2: How large is Fundamentum’s third fund?The fund is targeting approximately $200 million, with initial checks of about $10.5 million per startup. It aims to back 8 to 10 early-stage companies in consumer tech, fintech, and AI.

Q3: What is Fundamentum’s investment focus for Fund III?The firm is focusing on Indian startups building consumer technology, fintech, and AI applications, particularly those leveraging existing global models for financial services, content, and vernacular consumer use cases.

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