Serial entrepreneur-turned-angel investor Sanjay Mehta has backed almost 70 startups across sectors and is now bullish on cryptocurrencies
Image: Mexy Xavier
At a recent conference in New York, Jamie Dimon hit out at bitcoins. The CEO of JPMorgan Chase likened the volatility of the digital currency—which has fluctuated in value from just over $2 in 2011 to around $5,000 in September before dropping to around $4,300 at the time of going to press—to the tulip mania that raged across The Netherlands in the 17th century. At that time, the contract prices of the newly-introduced flower bulbs in the country reached extraordinarily high levels before crashing dramatically. “It is worse than tulip bulbs,” Dimon told a packed audience. “It could be at $20,000 before this happens, but it will eventually blow up. I am just shocked that no one can see it for what it is.”
Amid this drama, Sanjay Mehta remains unperturbed. The entrepreneur-turned-investor acknowledges the volatility around cryptocurrencies, but doesn’t believe that it is all fantastical hype. They, in fact, are the future of money, he says. Besides, that an investment-banking boss whose industry presided over the mortgage-backed securities bubble that led to the global financial meltdown in 2008 should say so is ironical.
An anonymous person invented bitcoin—the first cryptocurrency—in the aftermath of the financial crisis in 2009, spurred on by a lack of trust in traditional banking. Unlike fiat currencies that are minted by central governments, bitcoins are computer-generated and free from the control of any authority. So, by using bitcoins, people can bypass banks and traditional payment processes to pay for goods and services or transfer money to one another. Every bitcoin transaction is indelibly recorded on the blockchain—a kind of ledger or giant database that sits on tens of thousands of machines around the globe, managed by volunteers who track credits and debits.
“It’s still early days in crypto-investing and will be so till about 2020. So, this is the time to take risks and be bold,” says Mehta, who currently holds not just bitcoins but also a number of “altcoins”, or alternative cryptocurrencies, like bitcoin cash, peerplays, civic and EOS. His investment in the latter, done through an “initial coin offering” or ICO, where money for cryptocurrency-based projects is raised by selling digital tokens to investors in exchange for cryptocurrencies, has gone up by 300x. The “digital tokens” in this case are called EOS, which can be redeemed on Block.One, a platform that claims to provide end-to-end solutions to help bring businesses onto the blockchain.
We’re at a tony coffee shop in suburban Mumbai where Mehta has just wrapped up a meeting. The 46-year-old, who founded a series of startups, including his latest Maia Intelligence, a business intelligence provider that was acquired by Datamatics in 2015, is now a full-time angel investor. “It’s now all proxy-entrepreneurship for me,” he smiles, explaining that he gets to experience the thrills—and challenges—of entrepreneurship through the startups he has invested in. It’s also the kick of making a tangible difference that gets him fired up. “If I invest in listed equities or gold, all I can do is wait and see how the market reacts. But with angel investing, I can add value to startups and actually move the needle,” he says.
“ It’s still early days in crypto-investing. This is the time to take risks and be bold.
(This story appears in the 27 October, 2017 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)