In less than a year since its inception, the Gruhas Collective Consumer Fund (GCCF) — a partnership between Nikhil Kamath-backed Gruhas and Collective Artists Network — has hit a major milestone. The fund has successfully closed its debut corpus at ₹100 crore and, riding on strong investor confidence, has already initiated a ₹50-crore green-shoe option to expand its capital base.
The move underscores growing enthusiasm for India’s consumer story, particularly at a time when homegrown brands are redefining aspiration, identity, and innovation across categories.

Credits: Ascendants
Backed by Institutions and Industry Heavyweights
GCCF’s closing attracted a strong mix of investors, including institutional players such as 360 One Prime (IIFL Wealth) and Anand Rathi, along with several family offices and UHNI/HNI backers from diverse geographies.
This blend of traditional wealth managers and emerging investors signals rising conviction in India’s consumer evolution — one where storytelling, design, and technology converge to create high-impact brands.
The fund’s limited partners aren’t merely betting on returns; they’re backing a broader movement — one that reflects confidence in Indian entrepreneurship’s ability to build global-quality consumer businesses.
Betting on the Brands of Tomorrow
So far, GCCF has made seven early bets across the childcare, lifestyle, and food & beverage sectors. Its portfolio features emerging consumer stars like Superyou, Fur Jaden, Fresh Press, Bebe Burp, Bummer, Emomee, and Bold Care — each addressing unique gaps in evolving consumer behavior.
Interestingly, the fund reports a projected internal rate of return (IRR) of nearly 70%, thanks to successive valuation mark-ups in two portfolio companies. While these are early-stage gains, they hint at the momentum behind India’s consumer brand ecosystem — one that thrives on authenticity and innovation rather than imitation.
The India Story, Rewritten
Reflecting on the fund’s milestone, Nikhil Kamath emphasized that this success is “less about the number and more about what it says about India today.” He elaborated, “For the longest time, we believed foreign was better; now Indian founders are building brands that tell our own story. The idea is simple — when storytelling meets strong fundamentals, some very interesting businesses will come out of India.”
His words echo a broader sentiment among investors: that the next wave of Indian unicorns will emerge not just from tech, but from brand-led consumer ventures that connect emotionally with India’s young, aspirational audience.
Building a New Kind of Consumer Fund
With its maiden fund fully subscribed and its ₹50-crore green-shoe in motion, GCCF is positioning itself as more than just a financier. Its model sits at the intersection of capital, creativity, and consumer insight.
By leveraging Gruhas’ investment acumen and Collective Artists Network’s influence and storytelling expertise, the fund is uniquely equipped to help early-stage consumer brands scale with both business rigor and cultural resonance.
This approach marks a shift from traditional venture capital that prioritizes growth at any cost. GCCF’s focus is on sustainable value creation — backing founders who blend aesthetics with operational excellence, and who see India’s consumer transformation as both a creative and economic opportunity.
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Credits: The Economic Times
A Catalyst for India’s Consumer Revolution
India’s consumption landscape is at an inflection point. As middle-class incomes rise and Gen Z’s purchasing power expands, consumers are increasingly seeking Indian-made brands that reflect their values, stories, and lifestyles.
Funds like GCCF are poised to play a catalytic role in this evolution — nurturing the next wave of “Made in India, for the world” brands.
With disciplined capital deployment, a portfolio already showing strong returns, and a philosophy that champions authenticity, GCCF’s debut success might just mark the beginning of a new chapter in India’s consumer economy — one where the world looks to India not just for manufacturing muscle, but for brand imagination.




