Enterprise AI firm Fractal Analytics sets ₹857-900 IPO price band as cofounder Srikanth Velamakanni bets on long-term growth, R&D and India's AI future
Investor needs to know AI is transformative: Fractal CEO Velamakanni
Fractal is the first artificial intelligence (AI) company in India to go public. How do you see this as a founder?
It’s a meaningful step towards building Fractal for the next hundred years. That’s how I see it. Beyond that, it also sets the right governance expectations. Overall, it’s a strong move towards creating an institution for the future. We’re very excited about it.
The IPO size has been reduced compared to initial expectations. Why?
When pricing the IPO, we wanted it to be attractive for incoming investors, especially since enterprise AI is still not fully understood in India. We received guidance that pricing should allow investors to see potential returns. At this price point, many of our existing investors preferred to stay invested rather than sell, which reduced the overall issue size.
Globally, there’s a debate over whether AI is a bubble. Do you think Indian retail investors are mature enough to understand this business, or will they just ride the AI wave?
Anyone claiming to fully understand how AI will reshape the world is probably overstating it. This is one of the most defining technologies of our time — like the internet, but 10x faster and 10x better.
Most people don’t fully grasp how AI will change the world. Retail investors don’t need to understand every technical detail — they need to recognise that AI is transformative and already widespread. About 10 per cent of the world is using ChatGPT, which has 800 million weekly active users, as well as other AI platforms like Gemini. AI is accessible to the masses, and that gives investors a sense of how good an AI company can be.
Will your research and development (R&D) investments continue to increase over time? Do you have a benchmark in mind?
Yes, we aim to systematically increase R&D spending. Global tech companies spend about 14 per cent of revenue on R&D. We may not reach that, but we want to be significantly above where we are today and far above the average Indian company.