Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
Sports
History
Fiction
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/ac/97/de/ac97de29-efa7-aee3-269e-ef00a3e27992/mza_653900568553581623.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Odds on Open
Ethan Kho
28 episodes
3 days ago
Conversations with leading thinkers on trading, betting, and risk. Formerly the Build to Last Podcast. Hosted by Ethan Kho. Produced by Patrick Kho.
Show more...
Business
RSS
All content for Odds on Open is the property of Ethan Kho and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Conversations with leading thinkers on trading, betting, and risk. Formerly the Build to Last Podcast. Hosted by Ethan Kho. Produced by Patrick Kho.
Show more...
Business
https://d3t3ozftmdmh3i.cloudfront.net/staging/podcast_uploaded_nologo/43070126/43070126-1739887789603-f72c38778521f.jpg
Venture Capitalist Avik Ashar: VC Is How Asia’s Richest Future-Proof Their Businesses
Odds on Open
42 minutes 28 seconds
4 months ago
Venture Capitalist Avik Ashar: VC Is How Asia’s Richest Future-Proof Their Businesses

If venture capital underperforms the public markets, is it still worth the investment? For Avik Ashar, the answer is yes—but not for the reasons you think. Avik, a Principal at Riverwalk Holdings, an India-focused VC firm, argues that most people misunderstand how venture capital works and how to fairly evaluate VC fund performance.Venture capital, he explains, isn’t just about chasing unicorns or short-term IRRs. It’s a strategic investment tool, especially in Asia, used by family offices and conglomerates not only for returns but also for M&A, R&D, and market expansion. In markets like India, venture capital is helping industrial groups future-proof their businesses while tapping into innovation. He also highlights how India’s maturing public markets and mutual fund sector are making early-stage investing and startup exits far more viable than in places like Southeast Asia, where liquidity is still limited.He breaks down:– Why VC returns vs public markets often look misleading—unless you know how to analyze them– How family offices in India are using venture funding for strategic acquisitions– Why M&A is finally taking off in Asia—and what that means for founders– The key differences between venture capital in India, Southeast Asia, and the U.S.– Why India’s public markets are becoming a critical exit path– How startup exits work in markets without strong IPO pipelines– Why Southeast Asia’s VC boom from 2014–2018 underperformed– What Gen Z needs to understand about building in a noisy, AI-native world– How venture capital vs private equity differs in terms of outcomes, strategy, and timelinesHe also shares an important reminder for our age of endless short-form content: “The most expensive thing you can give today isn’t your time—it’s your attention.”00:00 Intro00:33 Why invest in venture capital?01:01 How venture returns work03:01 Venture as an R&D and acquisition pipeline04:11 The outlier nature of VC returns05:11 Why family offices invest in venture05:52 Examples of conglomerate acquisitions in India09:43 Differences in VC ecosystems: US, Singapore, and India16:29 Do family-backed VCs perform better in India?16:50 Riverwalk Holdings’ experience in India18:22 Maturity of India’s financial ecosystem for startups23:59 Where will venture gains come from?27:51 Indian conglomerates embracing startups28:52 Challenges of building companies in Asia30:22 Advice for young people in an uncertain world32:44 Tech’s share of the US market cap38:04 Staying focused amidst noise40:57 Advice for recent graduates42:24 Outro

Odds on Open
Conversations with leading thinkers on trading, betting, and risk. Formerly the Build to Last Podcast. Hosted by Ethan Kho. Produced by Patrick Kho.