IIM Bangalore launches Tony James Centre of Excellence for Private Equity and Venture Capital
Gauri Mittal | August 7, 2025 | 05:25 PM IST | 2 mins read
The IIMB centre for private equity management is established by alumni donation from Mathew Cyriac.
Indian Institute of Management Bangalore (IIM Bangalore or IIMB) has established India’s first Private Equity and Venture Capital (PEVC) Centre of Excellence, named the “Tony James Centre for PEVC”. The centre honours Hamilton Evans “Tony” James, former president, COO, and executive vice chairman of Blackstone, an investment firm. The centre aims to be a platform for “research, education, industry collaboration, policy engagement, and talent development”.
The IIMB private equity centre was formalised with an alumni contribution by Post Graduate Programme (PGP) 1994 alumnus Mathew Cyriac, institute gold medallist, 2025 Distinguished Alumni Award (DAA) recipient, chairman of Florintree Advisors, and co-founder at Yali Capital.
Cyriac’s contribution supports the establishment of the centre, along with the naming of four classrooms after “eminent” finance area faculty and several PGP and doctoral scholarships.
Also read SFPI Vidyadhan scholarship to benefit 1 lakh Indian students for higher education
The faculty legacy classrooms at IIMB were named in honour of Late Prakash G Apte, Prasanna Chandra, S Sundararajan, and George Varughese. The honourees thanked Cyriac for his “remarkable purity of soul”.
IIM Bangalore Centre of Excellence
“I was very interested in building something from the ground up. Considering that IIMB is one of the nation’s highest-ranked B-schools with a finance specialisation, I wanted to reinforce that position,” said Cyriac. He also remarked that the new centre of excellence will engage with students, young professionals, PE firms, the IIMB academic research community, and limited partners (LP) who will provide the capital for funds to invest.
Tony James graced the event and explained why India needs a private equity system despite having a “robust” public equity system: “PE and VC have been powerful engines of growth. We couldn’t have the burgeoning transformational entrepreneurial sector that distinguishes the USA from other nations without this kind of capital.”
Also read IIM Calcutta, Imarticus Learning launch private equity, venture capital programme
James added that these markets lower the cost of capital, speed up access to funds, and enable companies to scale faster.
Other dignitaries present at the IIMB centre inauguration included Sourav Mukherji, dean, alumni relations and development, IIMB, Dinesh Kumar, director-in-charge, IIMB, Thampy, the Florintree chair at IIMB PEVC centre, Vivek Pandit, senior partner and global co-leader, PE and principal investors at McKinsey, and Sanjiv Mehta, executive chairman, L Catterton India.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Featured News
]- Maharashtra eases university teacher recruitment norms; academic weightage cut to 60% from 75%
- UP Budget 2026-27: Vocational education funds up 88%; 14 new medical colleges; school outlay highest
- 3 yrs after UGC guidelines, 80% central universities yet to appoint professors of practice, private ones lead
- NMC approves record 20,098 new MBBS, PG medical seats, 777 after initial rejection
- 2 years into paramedical courses, students find themselves in vocational training; 300 protest in North Bengal
- Vidya Pravesh: 4.2 crore students across 8.9 lakh schools covered, but numbers now falling consistently
- Over 7 lakh Kendriya Vidyalaya students assessed via education ministry’s TARA app, 1.46 lakh on career tool
- Caste on Campus: The shape of discrimination in universities and why many back UGC equity regulations
- Across Telangana’s new government medical colleges, 26 depts empty, 31 with single teachers: Doctors’ survey
- ‘No TET’: School teachers’ jobs at risk, hundreds in Delhi to rally against mandatory eligibility tests