Navtej Sarna, who is on a maiden trip to San Francisco and Los Angeles, addressed the Indian-American community in Los Angeles and applauded their dynamism and philanthropy.
He also had a series of meetings with top business executives, think tanks and community leaders.
Top among them included meeting with the Walt Disney chairman, Andy Bird, and vice president Alan Braverman, meeting with Ciscos John Chambers, a round table with the prestigious Bay Area Council and another one organised by US India Strategic and Partnership Forum.
"There is tremendous sense of optimism and excitement (among American businesses), Sarna said.
American businesses, he said, are uniformly positive about Indias reforms and excited about the new opportunities like the one in healthcare sector that has come up in the latest budget, Indias top diplomat to the United States has said.
They (American business leaders) are uniformly positive about Prime Minister's reforms. They are very excited about the fact that we have opened up FDI in so many areas, he said.
Start ups are particularly a very good area of cooperation, the ambassador said referring to his meetings with the American businesses in the west coast.
Virtually every sector of the economy is open to foreign direct investment, Sarna said in his address to the Bay Area Council.
India which has attracted USD60 billion in foreign direct investment is today the most favoured destination for FDI.
India with its USD1.5 trillion plan in infrastructure sector offers great opportunities for American companies, he said.
In his address to the community leaders, Sarna said India is witnessing transformational changes.
There is a huge burgeoning and rich middle class, whose purchasing power has increased hugely, Sarna said.
While in San Francisco, Sarna also visited Gadar Memorial -- an iconic moment from India's freedom struggle.
Early this week, he also visited Bancroft, Doe and the South/Southeast Asia at Berkeley Library in University of California.
Well known as a Sikh scholar of eminence, Sarna during his visit viewed parts of the South Asians in North America Collection, which is housed in Bancroft, and other Library holdings on Sikhism.
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