We apply structured, strategic thinking to unlock capital flows into India's most underfunded sectors — bridging development intent with commercial execution.
Yukti — meaning "wisdom" or "strategy" in Sanskrit — reflects our founding conviction: that the capital gap in India's development sectors is not primarily a supply problem. It is a structure problem. There is capital available. What is missing is the architecture to deploy it at scale.
We were established to fill precisely that gap. As a specialist blended finance advisory firm, Yukti Capital designs, structures, and executes transactions that bring together development capital and commercial investors — creating vehicles that neither would build alone.
Unlike conventional advisory firms that deliver a report and step back, we stay in the transaction. We manage structuring, legal work, investor coordination, and capital close — with accountability for outcomes, not just outputs.
Our work is guided by a belief that India's development challenges are fundamentally solvable with the right financial architecture, the right stakeholder alignment, and patient, expert execution.
Deep knowledge of India's regulatory, financial, and development landscape — from RBI frameworks to DFI mandates.
We don't just advise — we structure, negotiate, coordinate legal teams, and close transactions end-to-end.
We align commercial and development capital interests from the outset — ensuring both sides are genuinely committed.
Every structure we build is designed to be replicable, codified, and shared — shifting market practice, not just moving capital once.
We structure deals that are genuinely aligned — not financial engineering that conceals risk. We would rather lose a mandate than compromise on structure quality.
Every transaction is evaluated against development outcomes — not just financial returns. Impact measurement is not a reporting exercise; it shapes our structuring decisions.
We build to scale. Every structure, term sheet, and risk-sharing model we develop is designed to be documented, shared, and deployed again — building India's blended finance commons.