Your Name:
Your Email Address:
Friend's Name:
Friend's Email Address:
  

In 1981, it was Sudha Murthy’s savings of Rs 10,000 that was a big contribution to the Infosys story.

Sudha Murthy, wife of Infosys co-founder and chief mentor N R Narayana Murthy, has sold shares worth Rs 430 crore or $92 million to back her husband’s plan to raise a venture capital fund. So, the fund corpus, as of now, is $129 million. 

In 1981, it was Sudha Murthy’s savings of Rs 10,000 that was a big contribution to the Infosys story.   

Filing made with exchanges show that Sudha Murthy sold 2 million shares, which amounts to a little less than a quarter of her holding of 1.62%. Last month, Murthy, India's IT services industry icon, sold shares worth Rs 174.3 crore ($37 million) to set up an early stage VC fund Catamaran. India's second-largest software exporter has said that Murthys do not plan any more stake sales for the fund.

As of September end, Murthy held a 0.55% stake in Infosys while his family held another 4.42% stake in India's second-largest IT services provider.

In the same filing made to the Bombay Stock Exchange, Infosys said that S. Gopalakrishnan, CEO and MD of Infosys, has bought 4 lakh shares in the firm for Rs 86.6 crore. Gopalakrishnan and his family hold a 3.34% stake in Infosys.

"The Venture Capital Fund will encourage and support young entrepreneurs having brilliant business ideas. The Fund will primarily invest in India and may on a case-to-case basis consider investing overseas," an earlier statement had said. The VC fund will look at areas like healthcare, retail, technology with early stage investments.

Comments

swaminathan,

I hope they would surely encourage innovative ideas on various other technologies additional to IT. Idea of funding early start up is a good move.

sankalp Chandelkar,

it is an very good move to start a VC fund by IT Giant it will definitely encourage young enterpreneurs like us to take up bold steps to start a venture

Wants to know more about which are the specific fields in technology will be targeted by CATAMARAN

Post new comment

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options


Indepth
The judiciary has yet again recognized the principles laid down in Azadi Bachao Andolan’s case.
The addition of distressed assets to a Fund Manager’s portfolio must compensate for the risks associated with it.
Interviews
Harshal Shah talks about RTVL’s new sector focus, performance of portfolio firms and exit strategy for Yatra.com.
Bala Deshpande of NEA feels that risk factors have become more addressable in the current phase of dealmaking.