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Capital crunch: India’s media and entertainment sector battles for investor attention

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MUMBAI: India’s media and entertainment sector is trapped in a paradox. High growth, high opportunity, but persistently low institutional capital. At the CII Big Picture Summit, a panel titled “Bridging the Funding Gap: Unlocking Investment for India’s M&E Sector” brought together industry veterans and investors to dissect why a sector contributing Rs 3.5 trillion struggles to attract serious money, and what needs fixing.

Shibashish Sarkar of Reliance Entertainment, chairing the session, framed the challenge starkly: a century-old industry built on private passion and private purses now needs institutional heft to scale. But the money isn’t flowing. Atul Phadnis of Vitrina AI pointed to a brutal cocktail of recent shocks: Covid’s production surge followed by a stock market hammering of media companies, Netflix’s subscriber wobbles, Hollywood strikes, and the slow-motion collapse of linear TV. Global production financing, tracked daily by Vitrina across 100 countries, shows volumes slumping to near pre-pandemic levels, with the United States weakened and government-backed markets like Germany, Japan and Brazil surging ahead.

Nicolas Granatino, president of Stem AI and backer of India’s first triple-A console game based on Indian mythology, sees untapped goldmines. “The talent here is incredible,” he said, pointing to India’s epics, the Ramayana, the Mahabharata, as story worlds with global reach that remain criminally underexploited. His bet on Age of Vipara, involving Amish Tripathi and Abhita Bachchan, backs Indian IP at Hollywood quality, targeting both eastern authenticity and western novelty.

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Joachim Laqueur, founding partner of 432 Legacy Ventures, argued that the real bottleneck isn’t creativity but infrastructure: rights management, audience discovery, transparent distribution. “You can create a great film with great stars, but distributing it through normal agency channels just doesn’t work anymore,” he said. His fund targets the plumbing: tools that let creators find audiences in Japan, partner with South Korea, price content intelligently and deliver returns to backers.

Anup Chandrasekhar, chief operating officer for regional content at The Epic Company, made the strongest pitch for regional markets, where 60 per cent of theatrical revenue originates. Regional cinema, he insisted, is investor-friendly if you avoid cherry-picking single films and commit to slates. Returns of 20 to 40 per cent are achievable, he claimed, but institutional funding remains scarce. Instead, producers rely on loan sharks charging 3 to 4 per cent monthly interest. “India is not Hindi. India is a constellation of regional languages,” Chandrasekhar said, urging investors to back vernacular franchises like Pushpa and niche OTT platforms catering to hyperlocal dialects and genres: Marathi theatre, micro-dramas, community-specific content.

The panel, which also featured Karan Taurani, executive vice president at Elara Capital, and Aneesh Dev, managing director of WAMIndia, agreed: the old revenue models are dead. Linear TV is a bonus, not a base. Content must be platform-agnostic, multi-revenue, multi-format. The sector isn’t dying, it’s shape-shifting.

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The message to investors? Stop treating India’s media sector as a Bombay monolith. Think regional, think IP, think infrastructure. The opportunities are there. The capital, for now, is not.
 

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Axis Bank named Official Banking Partner of DP World PGTI

Partnership supports all tournaments this season to grow professional golf in India.

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MUMBAI: Axis Bank just teed up a hole-in-one partnership because when a bank sponsors golf’s biggest swing in India, even the fairways feel more financially secure. Axis Bank has been appointed Official Banking Partner of the DP World Professional Golf Tour of India (DP World PGTI), strengthening its commitment to sporting excellence and community engagement while backing the growth of professional golf across the country.

Under the partnership, Axis Bank will support all DP World PGTI tournaments this season, contributing to talent development, enhanced tournament experiences and wider fan engagement. The collaboration aligns the bank’s values of precision, discipline and trust with the Tour’s focus on performance and opportunity.

Axis Bank executive director Munish Sharda said, “We are pleased to partner with DP World PGTI as its Official Banking Partner. Golf embodies precision, discipline, and a pursuit of excellence qualities that strongly reflect who we are at Axis Bank. This association also strengthens our engagement with India’s growing premium customer segments, where the sport has a deep and enduring connect.”

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Professional Golf Tour of India president Kapil Dev said, “We are extremely pleased to welcome Axis Bank as a Tour Partner of the DP World Professional Golf Tour of India. Partnerships of this stature play a vital role in strengthening the foundation of the Tour, enhancing opportunities for our players, and expanding the sport’s reach across the country.”

Professional Golf Tour of India CEO Amandeep Johl added, “Axis Bank’s strong legacy of excellence, innovation, and nationwide reach aligns perfectly with DP World PGTI’s goal to elevate professional golf in India and provide greater opportunities for our players.”

In a sport where every stroke counts and every partnership drives distance, Axis Bank isn’t just backing golfers, it’s investing in the fairway to future, turning India’s greens into a stage where precision meets passion and every drive has the power to inspire.

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