Venture Capital

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Rebright Partners

Rebright Partners is a seed stage focused incubator for internet and mobile service startups.

Rebright Partners logo

Rebright Partners

Rebright Partners is a seed stage focused incubator for internet and mobile service startups. They have made 74 investments, including a Series A investment in Nivaan on January 27, 2026. Rebright Partners has facilitated 9 portfolio exits, including LetsTransport on February 10, 2026.

General information

Firm type

Venture Capital

Year founded

AUM

Undisclosed

Location

Region

Asia

Country

Singapore

City

Singapore

Corporate office

10 Anson Road, #14-06 International Plaza, Singapore 079903

Additional offices

Tokyo, Japan · Bengaluru, India

Principals

Takeshi Ebihara

Founding General Partner

Brij Bhasin

Partner

Hidemasa Ikeda

Principal / Executive Officer, Head of Japan

Mahesh Kumar

Principal

Sector focus

Enterprise SoftwareAI/MLDigital HealthFinTechMobility & TransportationAgriTech & FoodTechEdTechLogistics & Supply ChainPropTechInsurTechClimateTechRobotics & Automation

Frequently asked questions

Who makes the final call on portfolio company investments at Rebright?

Investment decisions are led by Founding General Partner Takeshi Ebihara and India-based Partner Brij Bhasin. Ebihara brings three decades of venture and operating experience, including founding a publicly listed internet company in Japan. Bhasin co-founded the GSF Accelerator in India and was an early team member at Little Eye Labs, which was acquired by Facebook in 2014.

How does Rebright Partners source deals across its three regional offices?

Rebright maintains physical offices in Tokyo, Bengaluru, and Singapore, each serving a distinct sourcing function. The firm runs outreach through its network of Japanese corporate LPs, Indian accelerator alumni networks, and the Southeast Asian startup ecosystem. Two Japanese secondees joined the team in 2025 specifically to build pipelines between Japanese corporations and Indian startups.

Does Rebright Partners invest regionally from a single fund, or are the vehicles separated by geography?

The firm's public materials do not specify fund structures. Its Singapore and India offices are explicitly labeled as consulting entities that are not qualified to provide local or foreign fund management services, suggesting that fund vehicles and management likely sit outside those jurisdictions, possibly in Japan where the firm's primary investor base resides.

Which sectors does Rebright Partners explicitly avoid?

Rebright does not publish a negative list of excluded sectors. However, the entire disclosed portfolio is concentrated in technology and digital platforms covering enterprise software, healthtech, logistics, agritech, edtech, mobility, and fintech. There are no disclosed investments in hard manufacturing, deep science, or natural resources extraction.

What is Rebright's known posture on co-investments alongside external VCs?

Rebright co-invests regularly alongside other institutional venture investors across its portfolio. Its exits include Numocity Technologies acquired by ABB e-Mobility, Tookitaki acquired by Thunes, and Elanic acquired by Sharechat — all transactions where multiple venture investors on the cap table worked with corporate acquirers, indicating a collaborative syndication approach.

How is the firm's India office structured given it is labeled a consulting firm?

According to the firm's own website, the Bengaluru office is a consulting firm not qualified to provide local or foreign fund management services. This means the entity on Residency Road handles deal flow, research, and portfolio management support without functioning as a regulated fund manager under Indian securities law. The same restriction applies to the Singapore office.

What is Rebright's exit strategy for its early-stage investments?

The portfolio record shows a mix of strategic acquisitions and holding positions in scaled platforms. Exit examples include Numocity Technologies acquired by ABB e-Mobility, Tookitaki acquired by Thunes, Elanic acquired by Sharechat, and Uncanny Vision acquired by Eagle Eye Networks. The firm also holds large positions in companies like Bukalapak that reached public-market scale in Indonesia.

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