Zerodha co-founder Nithin Kamath on Monday shared some valuable insights on India’s IPO market, providing an easy breakdown on how companies that prioritise growth over profitability are filling the ecosystem and how the tax system might be a silent facilitator for that.
In a lengthy post on X, Kamath explained how the tax structure in India could influence investors, espectially venture capitalists (VC).
Kamath explained that if one takes money out of a business as dividends, the effective tax rates to be paid by such investors is 52%, including 25% corporate tax and 35.5% on personal income. However, withdrawing the money through significantly to just 14.95%, including cess.
“If you’re an investor (especially a VC), the math is simple: reduce corporate tax by showing minimal profits or losses. Spend (Burn) on acquiring users, build a growth narrative, and then sell shares at a higher valuation while paying much lower tax,” he wrote.
This spending, however, makes it harder for competitors’ survival, the Zerodha CEO said.
Kamath noted that venture capitalists are essentially playing a tax arbitrage game, he said, adding that most VC-backed businesses that got listed in the past few years show little to no profit.
“Once you run a business this way, it’s extremely difficult to switch,” he said.
Government designing tax arbitrage?
Explaining further, said said that startups that are 7-8 years old face constant pressures from VCs for an exit. Thus, with hardly any merger and acquisition prospect in India, IPO often becomes the only way out.
“The government probably designed this tax arbitrage to incentivize companies to spend money and not just accumulate and distribute. But I’m unsure if the balance is correct. I think it’s also creating businesses that aren’t very resilient. One prolonged market downturn, and many of these unprofitable companies would struggle to survive,” the Zerodha co-founder said.
Quirks of the Indian stock market
Nikhil Kamath further pointed out that.
“A company doing ₹100 cr revenue with 100% growth might get 10-15x, while a profitable one with 20% growth gets 3-5x. So VCs aren’t just saving on tax; they’re in essence creating a 3x higher exit valuation,” he said.
“If you’re competing against someone burning cash, you almost have to match it to defend market share, even if you don’t want to, because of the quirks I mentioned above,” Kamath added.
