India’s private equity and venture capital markets are undergoing a massive structural shift. The reliance on offshore capital is fading, but the biggest domestic whales haven’t even entered the water yet.
According to TVS Capital Funds, domestic financial institutions—specifically insurers and pension funds—are poised to drastically increase their role in India’s alternative investment space as regulatory frameworks evolve to support long-term domestic capital.
💰 THE DOMESTIC CAPITAL SHIFT: The foundation for a self-sustaining ecosystem is already being laid:
- The Current Baseline: As of March 2025, domestic investors accounted for 52.7% of capital in India’s Category I and II Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs). However, this has been driven almost entirely by High Net Worth Individuals (HNIs) and family offices, rather than institutional heavyweights.
- The Sovereign Catalyst: The Indian government is directly investing $10.88 billion (1 trillion rupees) via the RDI fund, creating a sovereign backing effect that is strengthening confidence among conservative institutions to commit to private equity.
🔓 THE UNTAPPED TRILLIONS: The real growth story lies in the massive, underutilized pools of institutional capital:
- The Insurance Gap: Under IRDAI rules, life insurers can allocate up to 3% of their controlled funds (and general insurers up to 5%) to AIFs. Currently, the industry has utilized less than 1% of that limit, leaving billions on the sidelines that could easily outperform standard treasury yields.
- The Pension Megapool: Pension and NPS (National Pension System) capital is the next major frontier. The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority is developing a framework that could unlock a portion of India’s staggering $762 billion (70 trillion rupees) pension pool for private markets.
🎯 TVS CAPITAL’S DEPLOYMENT STRATEGY: Despite macroeconomic stress in the lending space, TVS Capital (which manages roughly 70 billion rupees in commitments) is maintaining its long-term focus on financial services, enterprise tech, and manufacturing. While taking a disciplined approach to the AI hype cycle, they recently co-invested with Blackstone in AI cloud platform startup Neysa.
“Pension and NPS capital could be the next major pool to open up… a significant development because it would bring in a large base of patient, long-duration capital.” — Krishna Ramachandran, Managing Partner at TVS Capital Funds
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: To build a resilient, world-class private capital ecosystem, India cannot rely solely on offshore LPs or wealthy family offices. It needs domestic “patient capital”—funds with 10-to-20-year liabilities that can comfortably ride out macroeconomic volatility. If Indian regulators successfully unlock even a fraction of that $762 billion pension pool, it will fundamentally transform the scale, depth, and valuation multiples of the entire Indian private equity landscape.
👇 Institutional Allocators & PE Professionals: If India’s pension and insurance funds fully utilize their AIF allocation limits, will this massive influx of domestic capital drive up asset valuations and compress PE returns, or is the Indian mid-market large enough to absorb it efficiently?
