After a decade of profitable growth, Lighthouse Canton is entering its next phase with a clear ambition: to double assets under management within the next two years.
Group chief executive officer Shilpi Chowdhary says the target is deliberately ambitious, but grounded in a disciplined framework built around execution quality—prioritising client experience, talent depth, product innovation and technology as the foundations for scalable growth.
“There are qualitative and quantitative metrics we are tracking for growth,” Chowdhary said, speaking with LC IDEAs: Views & Insights.
On the qualitative side, that means how the firm performs on client experience, the strength of its teams, product innovation and technology infrastructure. “If we execute well on these fronts, the quantitative metrics follow,” he explained.
Client experience sits at the centre of the framework. “We have to remain continuously client-obsessed,” Chowdhary said, adding that this extends beyond relationship management into how the institution is built internally—from product development through to operations.
Talent is the second pillar. “World-class teams are critical—continuously focusing on internal talent and continuing to grow and attract top-tier professionals,” he said.
Product innovation follows closely behind. “We need to continue to innovate and bring world-class products,” Chowdhary noted, across both asset management and advisory. “That means consistently bringing compelling opportunities to the table.” Private markets also form a core part of the product led growth strategy, Chowdhary added.
Technology underpins the entire approach. “We need to build a strong user interface and user-experience technology that enhances productivity, including through GenAI tools,” he said.
If executed correctly, Chowdhary said the quantitative outcomes—including the firm’s goal of doubling AUM over the next two years—should follow naturally. “It would reflect that we are doing the right things,” he noted. AUM growth, he added, would be a signal of broader execution strength. “It means we are acquiring the right clients, hiring the right talent, building the right products and taking care of clients,” Chowdhary said, adding that this should ultimately lead to revenue doubling as well.

“We are focused on bringing interesting opportunities and transactions onto the platform and where we have strength is in alternatives,” he explained.
The asset and wealth manager is doubling down its efforts there, ensuring that they have a strong credit story and continuing to build out the real estate portfolio, besides their current offerings in life sciences research & development, bio and med-tech commercial real estate.
At the same time, Chowdhary stressed the importance of independence in product selection.
“We cannot simply sell our own internal products to our own clients,” he said. “There has to be independence.”
Third-party partnerships therefore remain essential. “Some of the most attractive products are not easily accessible to most investors,” Chowdhary said. “The question is how we bring those onto the platform and selecting the right partners to bring on board and help provide these opportunities.”
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CAPITAL RAISED
After a decade of profitable growth without external funding, Lighthouse Canton secured USD 40 million in strategic funding led by Peak XV Partners in 2025.
Chowdhary emphasized that the capital raise was not driven by necessity, but by strategic choice. “We are not a startup. We are a growth business, and we are a more mature business.”
The question investors ask most frequently, he noted, is timing. “The general question is, why now?”
The rationale, he explained, is deliberate and multi-layered.
The first is external validation. “It was important to validate what we are doing,” he said. “Is there independent validation of the business model? And I think there’s nothing better than that validation from top-tier investors — top-percentile investors — so you’ve got to respect that.”
The second driver is growth capital aligned to the institution’s alternatives strategy. “We are doing a lot of investments in our alternatives platform and asset management,” Chowdhary said. “That requires GP commitments.”
Rather than slowing momentum or stretching internal resources, capital enables acceleration. “Having capital allows you to grow faster because those GP commitments have to be made,” he said. “Rather than burning capital, we are investing it in a sensible way.”
Also read: The three pillars under which Lighthouse Canton is building its asset management strategy
The third consideration is balance-sheet strength. “We want balance sheet resilience at this point in time,” Chowdhary said. “The world is very choppy.”
That resilience, he added, has implications beyond risk management. “It allows you to attract and talk to talent when they know the balance sheet is strong,” Chowdhary said.
Capital also supports a longer-term people strategy. “High-growth businesses attract top-tier talent,” he said, reiterating that scale and ambition matter in recruiting and retaining senior professionals.
Over time, Chowdhary sees an additional milestone. “There’s no better way to monetise the hard work people put in over the years than taking the business public at some stage,” he said.
BUILDING WORLD-CLASS TEAMS
Talent remains the binding constraint to growth, according to Chowdhary. “People have to be ambitious and growth-minded,” he said.
Curiosity is non-negotiable. “They need to be lifelong learners,” Chowdhary said. “People who are willing to go beyond their core expertise and learn adjacencies.”
Teamwork is equally important for him.
Pedigree matters, but only in context. “Pedigree by itself will not get you there,” Chowdhary said. “You need all these elements together.”
What ultimately differentiates top performers is internal motivation. “It comes down to the hunger to grow as a human being and as a professional,” he shared.
As the organisation scales, preserving its culture becomes more complex.
“With growth, the leadership team inevitably has one degree of separation from those on the ground,” Chowdhary said. That makes cultural transmission critical. “We need to ensure the same sense of urgency and client obsession flows through the organisation,” he said.
Client outcomes suggest the approach is working. “Our clients have spoken highly of us,” Chowdhary said. “They have helped us acquire more clients.”
Retention remains strong. “Our client retention rates have been very high,” he noted.
He also stressed that standards must rise as resources increase. “What we achieved earlier was done with fewer resources,” he said. “With more people and more resources, we should do an even better job.”
Also read: Lighthouse Canton’s people strategy sharpens for a steep growth decade
THE PATH FORWARD
As 2026 begins, Lighthouse Canton's focus is translating strategy into execution—across client acquisition, product development, talent, and technology. The doubling of AUM is an early milestone in what Chowdhary frames as a decade-long ambition.
Also read: Lighthouse Canton 10X Ahead - Building the future on a decade of success
For Chowdhary, what will differentiate Lighthouse Canton in an increasingly competitive market is not ambition alone, but the discipline to execute against a clear framework


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