The Indian government is set to become a minor shareholder in AI startup Sarvam, picking up a 1-2% equity stake once the company's $300 million funding round closes. The stake will not come from a direct cash investment. Instead, it converts from compulsorily convertible debentures (CCDs) the government received in exchange for providing GPU compute infrastructure to Sarvam under the IndiaAI Mission.
Compulsorily convertible debentures are a financial instrument that must, by their terms, convert into equity at a future date or event. In this case, the trigger is the closing of Sarvam's current funding round, which effectively sets a clear market valuation and makes the conversion straightforward to price.
A government official, quoted anonymously in an Economic Times report, put the logic plainly: "The Centre will be taking a small stake in Sarvam. The support provided to companies under the IndiaAI Mission needs to be accounted for in some form, if not cash." MeitY and Sarvam both declined to comment before publication.
What the numbers look like
Sarvam's $300 million round is still being completed. So far, $234 million has been announced. HCLTech led with a $150 million cheque for a 10.46% stake, joined by Bessemer Venture Partners, Khosla Ventures, and Peak XV Partners. The round values Sarvam at $1.5 billion, making it India's 130th unicorn. At that valuation, the government's 1-2% stake would be worth roughly $15 million to $30 million in market terms, though its cost to the government was the subsidised compute access it provided.
Sarvam is among the largest beneficiaries of the IndiaAI Mission's compute allocation. It received subsidised access worth Rs 98.68 crore against a total compute bill of Rs 246.71 crore, covering 4,096 Nvidia H100 GPUs for six months. The programme covers 40% of the compute cost for selected startups, with the remainder billed to the company at a subsidised rate.
The startup's underlying business is growing fast. Unaudited financials shared by HCLTech show Sarvam's revenue for FY26 reached Rs 45.1 crore, up from just Rs 1.5 crore in FY25. The company, founded in 2023 by Pratyush Kumar and Vivek Raghavan, builds multilingual AI models and enterprise products covering language, speech, vision, and document AI. Its clients span banking, insurance, government, and defence.
Why the equity model is contested
The government's decision to take equity rather than grant support is not universally popular. Several startups approached under the IndiaAI Mission pushed back when the equity-conversion structure was first proposed, according to earlier reporting. Their preference was for a grant-based model that would not dilute founder and investor ownership. The concern is structural: if the government holds cap table positions in the startups it is also meant to regulate and procure from, the relationship becomes more complicated for both sides.
The IndiaAI Mission covers more than just Sarvam. Other selected companies include Soket AI Labs, Gnani.ai, Gan.AI, BharatGen, Tech Mahindra, Fractal Analytics, Avataar.ai, ZenteiQ Aitech Innovations, Genloop Intelligence, NeuroDx, and Shodh AI. It is not yet clear whether the CCD-to-equity conversion model applies uniformly across all of them.
For Sarvam specifically, the fresh capital is earmarked for research on next-generation frontier models focused on agentic AI, coding, and cybersecurity, as well as expanding large-scale compute infrastructure to support enterprise and government deployments. HCLTech's $150 million is the largest single investment by an Indian IT firm in a domestic AI startup, signalling that the country's established tech sector is beginning to back homegrown model builders at meaningful scale.
The government's eventual stake, while small in percentage terms, sets a precedent for how India structures public support for its AI ecosystem. Whether future mission beneficiaries accept equity conversion or push for outright grants will likely shape how aggressively startups engage with the programme going forward.