Understanding VC Fund Economics: The ₹100 Crore Fund Math

Complete deep dive into VC fund structure, economics, and operations. Learn how a ₹100 crore fund works: management fees, carry, return expectations by stage, investment thesis, deal flow strategy, and selection criteria with real 2024-2025 data.


The ₹100 Crore Fund: Basic Structure

A ₹100 crore ($12 million USD) VC fund is a medium-sized early-stage fund. Let’s break down the economics:

Capital Breakdown for a ₹100 Crore Fund

Component Amount Purpose
Fund Size ₹100 crore Total capital from LPs (limited partners)
Investment Period 5 years Years 1-5: Active investment phase
Hold Period 5-10 years Years 5-10: Portfolio management, exits
Annual Management Fee (2%) ₹2 crore/year Year 1-5 active investment period
Total Management Fees (5 years) ₹10 crore Goes to salaries, admin, office costs
Net Capital Deployed ₹90 crore ₹100Cr – ₹10Cr in fees = actual investments
Carry (20% on profits) 20% of returns above hurdle Fund managers keep 20% of gains

Critical Insight: A ₹100 crore fund only actually deploys ₹90 crore over 5 years because ₹10 crore goes to management fees. To achieve a 5x return for LPs, the fund must generate 5.5x+ on deployed capital (to account for fees). This is why deal quality matters so much.

Fund Team Structure (Typical)

A ₹100 crore fund typically has:

  • General Partners (GPs): 1-2 (managing partners who run the fund)
  • Investment Partners: 2-3 (sourcing, due diligence, portfolio management)
  • Associate/Analyst: 1-2 (research, ops, deal analysis)
  • Operations Manager: 1 (compliance, admin, fund accounting)
  • Total team: 5-9 people

Salaries (approximate): GPs ₹1-2 crore/year each, Partners ₹50L-₹1 crore, others ₹20-40L. Total annual salary bill: ₹8-15 crore including benefits and overhead.


The 2-20 Fee Structure Explained

The “2-20” is the standard VC fee structure globally. But it’s being challenged in India. Here’s how it works:

What is “2 and 20”?

The 2%: Annual Management Fee

How it works: The fund charges LPs 2% of committed capital every year for 5 years (the active investment period).

For a ₹100 crore fund: ₹2 crore/year × 5 years = ₹10 crore total

What it covers: Partner salaries, staff, office rent, legal fees, fund admin, compliance, due diligence costs

The 20%: Carried Interest (Carry)

How it works: Fund managers keep 20% of all profits above a hurdle rate (usually 8% annual return to LPs).

Example: If a ₹100 crore fund invests and generates ₹250 crore in value (2.5x return), the profit is ₹150 crore. After paying LPs their 8% hurdle (₹8Cr), the remaining ₹142 crore is split: LPs get 80% (₹113.6Cr), GPs get 20% carry (₹28.4Cr).

Important: GPs only make carry if the fund is profitable. It aligns incentives—managers only get paid for returns they generate.

Why 2-20 is Under Pressure in India

The Problem: For a ₹100 crore fund lasting 10 years, 2% annual fees add up to 20% of total capital. Combined with carry, this means:

If a fund needs 5x return to satisfy LPs after fees, deployed capital must return 5.5x or more. This is incredibly hard.

LPs are pushing back: Especially family offices and HNIs in India who can get 12-15% returns from index funds like NIFTY. They’re demanding lower management fees.

New models emerging:

  • 1-20 (1% management, 20% carry) – growing in India
  • 1-10 (1% management, 10% carry) – being tested by some funds
  • 1 and 25 (1% management, 25% carry) – incentivizes performance over fees
  • Cascade fees: 2% Year 1-3, dropping to 1.5% Year 4-5

Real Example: Artha Venture Fund (India)

Artha Venture Fund (Seed + Growth funds) has implemented:

  • 1% management fee (instead of 2%)
  • 10% hurdle rate (instead of 8%)
  • Shares 50% of carry with team members (not just GPs)

This model is gaining traction because it aligns manager and LP interests better, and is more fair to operations/support teams.


Return Targets by Investment Stage

VC funds set different return targets depending on the stage they invest in. This is because risk and timelines vary drastically:

Return Expectations by Stage

Stage Target MOIC (Multiple) Target IRR Timeline to Exit Why
Seed 50-100x 40%+ IRR 10 years Highest risk, many fail, need huge winners
Series A 10-15x 30-40% IRR 8-10 years High risk, longer path to exit
Series B-C 5-10x 25-30% IRR 5-7 years Product-market fit proven, clearer path
Growth/Pre-IPO 3-5x 15-25% IRR 1-3 years Low risk, proven business, near exit

Key Insight: Seed funds need 100x winners because most startups fail. If a seed fund invests ₹10 crore across 20 companies (₹50L each), maybe 15 fail (₹0 return), 4 return 2-5x (₹50L-₹1Cr each), 1 becomes the “unicorn” (₹25-50 crore). The one winner must pay for all the failures and generate the overall 30%+ IRR.

Real Performance Data (2025)

Percentile Median IRR (2017 Vintage) What This Means
Bottom 25% 5% IRR Underperformers (worse than index)
Median (50%) 11.5% IRR Average fund (matches market)
Top 75% 18.7% IRR Good performers
Top 10% 28.3% IRR Elite funds (exceptional)

Translation: Only 10% of VC funds achieve 25%+ IRR. Most funds (50%) are barely beating index returns (11.5% vs 12-15% stock market returns).


What is an Investment Thesis?

An investment thesis is a VC fund’s POV on: what markets/problems are interesting, what stage makes sense, what founders they back, what ROI they expect. It’s their North Star.

Example Investment Theses

Fund Type Example Thesis What They Look For
B2B SaaS Fund “Enterprise software for under-penetrated SME segments in India” Product-led growth startups, ₹1-5 crore ARR, 10+ person teams
Deeptech Fund “Physics-based startups solving trillion-dollar problems” PhD founders, 5+ year development, capital-intensive, high risk
Fintech Fund “Democratizing financial services in Southeast Asia” Compliance expertise, regulatory clarity, unit economics clear
Consumer Fund “D2C brands with 50%+ margins targeting Gen Z” Social media fluent founders, cohort economics, repeat purchase

Why Thesis Matters

  • Filters Deal Flow: Funds reject 70-80% of inbound deals in minutes because they don’t fit thesis
  • Builds Expertise: Focused on one sector means team knows dynamics, competitors, regulatory issues
  • Better Returns: Funds that stick to thesis outperform generalists. Focused knowledge = better investments
  • Portfolio Synergy: Multiple investments in same sector can create network effects and cross-benefits

Deal Flow: Volume and Quality

Deal flow is the pipeline of potential investments. Quality matter more than quantity.

Typical Deal Flow Metrics

A healthy VC fund receives:

  • 100-200 pitches per month (for seed/early-stage funds)
  • Of these, 5-10% are reviewed seriously
  • Of those, 20-30% go to partner meeting
  • Of partner meetings, 10-20% get term sheets
  • Final result: 1-2 investments per month (12-24 per year)

Timeline: From first pitch to term sheet: 8-12 weeks average for seed-stage deals

Where Deal Flow Comes From

Source % of Deals Quality
Founder Referrals 30-40% Highest (warm intros from trusted sources)
Angel Investors/Scouts 20-30% High (early believers filter it)
Portfolio Company Referrals 15-20% Very high (vetted by existing companies)
Accelerators 10-15% Medium (batch model, mixed quality)
Inbound/Cold Outreach 10-15% Low (high volume, low quality)
Conferences/Events 5-10% Low-Medium (hit or miss)

Pro Tip for Founders: Get a warm introduction from someone the VC knows. Cold emails have <2% chance of getting reviewed. Warm intros: >50% get meetings.


The 3 Core Selection Criteria

When VCs evaluate a startup, they use 3 primary filters (fast-screen rejects 70-80% of deals):

Criterion #1: Fit with Fund’s Investment Thesis

Questions VCs Ask:

  • Does this startup match our sector/stage focus?
  • Is the round size right for us? (e.g., a fund looking for ₹10-50 crore Series B won’t invest ₹50L seed)
  • Are we geographically interested? (Asia, India, specific city?)
  • Is the market timing right?

Result: 70-80% of deals filtered out here. If you don’t fit their thesis, instant pass.

Criterion #2: Team Quality & Fit with Execution Challenges

VCs Focus on:

  • Founder Pedigree: Previous exits? Startup experience? Domain expertise?
  • Team Completeness: Founding team balanced? (Tech + biz + ops?)
  • Execution Track Record: Have they shipped products? Hit milestones?
  • Founder-Market Fit: Do they deeply understand the problem they’re solving?
  • Coachability: Are they open to feedback or stubborn?

Reality: Some seed investors look ONLY at team, not product. They bet on founders, not ideas.

Criterion #3: Market Size & Opportunity

The Math: For a fund to generate 20-30% IRR with 1-2 exits, at least ONE portfolio company must become ₹1000+ crore revenue business.

This means the TAM (Total Addressable Market) must be at least ₹10,000+ crore. Smaller markets = lower ceiling = lower potential returns.

What They Evaluate:

  • TAM: How big could this market be?
  • Serviceable Addressable Market (SAM): What portion can the company realistically serve?
  • Market Timing: Is the market ready NOW or 5 years from now?
  • Competition: Is there 50 competitors or 2?
  • Defensibility: Once big, can competitors easily copy?

Portfolio Construction & Risk Management

VCs manage risk through portfolio diversification and follow-on investing strategy.

Typical Portfolio Allocation (₹100 Crore Fund)

Strategy Number of Investments Investment Size Total Deployed
Initial Checks (Seed Cheques) 20-30 companies ₹1-2.5 crore each ₹50 crore
Follow-on Investments (Series A, B) 10-15 best performers ₹2-5 crore each ₹30 crore
Reserve for Pro-rata Optional participation Not specified yet ₹10 crore
Total Deployed Portfolio of 20-30 Varied ₹90 crore

The “Power Law” of VC Returns

Critical Truth: In VC investing, 1-2 companies generate 70%+ of all returns. The rest provide small or zero returns.

Typical VC Portfolio Outcome:

  • 50% of investments: Lose ₹0 (startup dies, investors lose capital)
  • 30% of investments: Return 1-2x (modest gains, employees cash out)
  • 15% of investments: Return 5-20x (good outcomes, successful exits)
  • 5% of investments: Return 50x-1000x (1-2 unicorns that save the fund)

This is why VCs can afford to lose on 50% of bets. As long as 1-2 massive winners exist, the fund meets IRR targets.


Alternative Fee Models in India (Emerging)

India’s VC landscape is evolving. LPs are pushing for alternative fee structures:

Models Gaining Traction

Model Management Fee Carry Pros/Cons
1-20 (Emerging) 1% annually 20% Lower fees, better for LPs. Emerging favorite in India.
1-25 (Performance Focus) 1% annually 25% Incentivizes GPs to hit returns, not live on fees.
Cascade (1.5-2-1) 2% Y1-3, 1.5% Y4-5, 1% Y6+ 20% Higher fees early (when spending high), lower later. Aligns with work.
1-20 + Profit Share 1% annually 20%, split 50% with team Aligns entire team with performance. Fairest model.

Trend: Indian funds are moving away from 2-20 toward 1-20 or 1-25. This is good for LPs and aligns GP incentives better with performance.


Understanding VC Economics is the First Step

For founders: Know that VCs need 10-100x returns depending on stage. A seed fund needs you to become a ₹1000+ crore company. A Series B fund is happy with ₹100 crore. Pitch accordingly.

For LPs/future GPs: The 2-20 model is archaic in 2025. India is moving to 1-20 or 1-25 models. VCs can’t live on fees alone—they need strong returns. Only top 10% of funds hit 25%+ IRR.

The best VCs are those with aligned incentives, focused theses, strong deal flow, and ruthless selection criteria. Everything else is marketing.


Quick Summary: VC Fund Economics

1. A ₹100 crore fund deploys ₹90 crore (₹10Cr goes to fees). To achieve 5x LP return, must generate 5.5x+ on invested capital.

2. Standard 2-20 structure: 2% management fee ($2M/year for ₹100Cr fund), 20% carry on profits above 8% hurdle. Emerging India models: 1-20, 1-25, or cascade fees.

3. Return targets by stage: Seed 50-100x (40%+ IRR), Series A 10-15x (30-40% IRR), Series B-C 5-10x (25-30% IRR), Growth 3-5x (15-25% IRR).

4. Real performance: Median VC IRR 11.5%, Top 10% funds 28.3% IRR (2017 vintage). Most funds barely beat index returns.

5. Investment thesis: Filters 70-80% of deals in fast-screen. Funds bet on sector/stage, not individual companies.

6. Deal flow: 30-40% from founder referrals (best quality), 10-15% from cold outreach (worst quality). Warm intros 50% conversion vs cold 2%.

7. Selection criteria: (1) Fit with thesis, (2) Team quality + execution, (3) Market size (TAM ₹10,000+ crore required).

8. Power law: 1-2 companies generate 70%+ of returns. 50% of investments fail, 30% return 1-2x, 15% return 5-20x, 5% return 50x+.

 

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