(To say Indians, who have a private stash worth $1.5 trillion of the precious metal, have a fascination with gold would be an understatement. Jar is removing the pressure by giving people an asset class that Indians can relate to: gold. “Should they invest in mutual funds, stock market, crypto, various schemes from banks? The choices are aplenty as the world around them is littered with ads,” he said. Part of the reason why so many Indians never save or invest is confusion, explained Nishchay AG, co-founder and chief executive of Jar, in an interview. In the event of an unplanned expense or emergency, many are forced to rely on friends and family or shark lenders for capital injection.
The Bengaluru-headquartered startup, which has raised over $58 million to date, is engaging with a few investors and may add another few million dollars to the round, two sources familiar with the matter told TechCrunch.Įven as banks in India have opened a billion accounts for citizens in the South Asian market, a significant number of individuals don’t maintain any savings. TechCrunch previously reported the early deliberations of the round. The funding values the one-year-old startup at over $300 million, it said, and saw participation from Folius Ventures, Panthera Capital, Prophetic Ventures, Yes VC, WealthFront founder Adam Nash and Founders Fund principal Zachary Hargreaves as well as early backers Arkam Ventures, Rocketship.vc and WEH.
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Jar said Thursday it has raised $22.6 million in its Series B financing round. Tiger Global has led a new funding round in Jar, the Indian fintech that is helping millions of Indians save small amounts to invest in digital gold as the startup gears up to launch a host of new offerings including insurance, mutual funds and lending.