Professional Documents
Culture Documents
UNIVERSITY OF MUMBAI
ACADEMIC YEAR 2014-2015
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
On the event of completion of my project Private Equity in India. I take the opportunity
to express my deep sense of gratitude towards all those people without whose guidance,
inspiration and timely help, this project would have never seen light of the day.
Any accomplishment requires the effort of many people and this is not different. I find great
pleasure in expressing my deepest sense of gratitude towards my project guide Prof. Kavita
Shah for her valuable guidance and encouragement in implementing the project. It is because
of her efforts I was able to cover the manifold features of the project. She have supported and
guided in every possible way during this project.
INDEX
SR.N
CHAPTER
PAGE
NO
Introduction
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11
13
17
20
22
26
10
SEBI Guidelines
29
11
32
12
36
13
39
14
40
15
43
16
44
17
Conclusion
51
Bibliography
Appendix
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CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
India has been witnessing dramatic shift in the size and composition of foreign investment
inflows over the couple of years. Institutional investors in developed countries, for their
portfolio diversification, are continuously seeking new destinations and innovative and
alternative asset class. The Private Equity is the best alternative for raise money from an
investment.
The Private Equity sector is broadly defined as investing in a company through a negotiated
process. Investments typically involve a transformational, value-added, active management
strategy. Typical forms of private equity include venture capital, growth and mezzanine
capital, angel investing and private equity funds.
The major PE investments influencing the deal values are Real Estate, IT/IT Services and
Energy sectors. The other sectors, which have significantly contributed to private equity deal
value, are Logistics and Telecom. The most active sectors in terms of deal volume were IT/IT
Services and Manufacturing. Other sectors contributing significantly to deal volume were
Banking, Finance and Insurance and Real estate.
The PE investment pattern follows various stages, which are: seed, start-up, expansion and
replacement stages. It also follows a definite process, which is Deal Origination (Deal
Sourcing), Due Diligence, Deal Negotiation, Deal Closing (Acquisition), Post Acquisition
Monitoring and Exit (IPO, Trade Sale or Buy back).
The Indian Private Equity sector consists of many historical deals so far. Among them
Warburg Pincus Bharti Tele Venture deal was beginning of the PE era in India. By this
deal WP earned 450 % return on its investment which is the biggest earning by any PE fund
worldwide. On the other hand Bharti Tele Ventures Ltd. has result as huge growth in its
subscribers and became 2nd largest telecom company in India. After the deal with Warburg
Pincus, Bharti spread its business worldwide. Currently Bharti have its operations not only in
India, but also in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and 15 countries in South Africa. Subsequently
Bharti became 5th largest telecom service provider all over the world.
The project would deal with understanding the role of private equity in India, analysing their
investment strategies, their success in the Indian financial market, future of Private Equity in
India, regulatory norms in India and how it is beneficial of Indian companies. An attempt will
also be made to understand their investment patterns.
The project also includes the understanding of competitive profile of different players in
Private Equity in India and the different types of funding done by them in India like - seed
funding, expansion capital, and buyout financing, financing restructuring of companies and
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providing mezzanine capital. These all types are discussed in Major Private Equity Deals in
India.
The project is consists of top PE firms in the world. According to Private Equity International
(PEI), the largest private equity firm in the world today is TPG, based on the amount of
private equity direct-investment capital. Some other players in this ranking are; Goldman
Sachs Capital Partners, The Carlyle Group, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, The Blackstone Group
and Warburg Pincus
The project also includes the understanding of the Private Equity model of investments and
analysing the reason for investments in selective sectors. With India becoming a preferred
investment destination, this heightened level of private equity activity is likely to continue for
some time to come.
OBJECTIVES
The objective of this project is to study the role of private equity in India, analysing their
investment strategies, their particular strategies, by studying their entry strategies into India
financial markets, regulatory norms in India and how it is beneficial of Indian companies. An
attempt will also be made to understand their investment patterns.
The project would also deal with some of the major deals in India, this would help to
understand the investment pattern and then the exit strategies of the PE firms.
The project would also help to understand us what could be the scenario of the private equity
investments in the near future, and comparison of the Indian scenario with rest of the world
METHODOLOGY
Study would be mainly focused on the analysis and use of secondary data. Extensive use of
various journals, magazines and different online resources would be used to construct the
investment pattern. The entry strategies of the Private Equity firms with respect to the legal
structure will be understood. Various surveys and data sources would be used to figure out the
current investments in the economy.
Study would not be limited to the study only, but analysis of various deals and the pattern of
investment would also be done.
It would also include various regulatory norms for the private equity investment in India and
the benefits and hazards of PE over public equity.
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your company and, as shareholders; the investors returns are dependent on the growth and
profitability of your business.
The Private Equity sector is broadly defined as investing in a company through a negotiated
process. Investments typically involve a transformational, value- added, active management
strategy.
Private equity also means.
1. Ownership in a corporation that is not publicly-traded. That is, private equity involves
investing in privately held companies. Most of the time, private equity investors are
institutional investors and high net-worth individuals who have a large amount of capital to
commit to these investments. Private equity is usually held for a long period of time, and
trading in it is useful when a company is in danger of bankruptcy, because it provides access
to a great deal of capital very quickly.
2. A company that trades in private equity. Often, private equity firms band together and buy
out publicly-traded companies, making them privately held.
Definitions
The Private Equity sector is broadly defined as investing in a company through a
negotiated process. Investments typically involve a transformational, value-added,
active management strategy. Typical forms of private equity include venture capital,
growth and mezzanine capital, angel investing and private equity funds. Private equity
investors seek to obtain a substantial interest in a company in order to have an active
role in firms strategic decisions. Their goal is to boost the value of a company and
walk away with substantially more money at the time of liquidating their investment.
Private equity consists of investors and funds that make investments directly into
private companies or conduct buyouts of public companies. Capital for private equity
is raised from institutional investors and can be used to fund new technologies,
expand working capital within an owned company, make acquisitions, or to
strengthen a balance sheet.
techniques used to finance commercial ventures in ways that do not involve the use of
publicly tradable assets such as corporate stock or bonds.
Equity capital that is not quoted on a public exchange. Private equity consists of
investors and funds that make investments directly into private companies or conduct
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buyouts of public companies that result in a delisting of public equity. Capital for
private equity is raised from retail and institutional investors, and can be used to fund
new technologies, expand working capital within an owned company, make
acquisitions, or to strengthen a balance sheet.
The majority of private equity consists of institutional investors and accredited
investors who can commit large sums of money for long periods of time. Private
equity investments often demand long holding periods to allow for a turnaround of a
distressed company or a liquidity event such as an IPO or sale to a public company.
Investors have been acquiring businesses and making minority investments in privately held
companies since the dawn of the industrial revolution. Merchant bankers in London and Paris
financed industrial concerns in the 1850s; most notably CrditMobilier, founded in 1854 by
Jacob and Isaac Pereire, who together with New York based Jay Cooke financed the United
States Transcontinental Railroad.
Andrew Carnegie sold his steel company to J.P. Morgan in 1901 in arguably the first true
modern buyout
Later, J. Pierpont Morgan's J.P. Morgan & Co. would finance railroads and other industrial
companies throughout the United States. In certain respects, J. Pierpont Morgan's 1901
acquisition of Carnegie Steel Company from Andrew Carnegie and Henry Phipps for $480
million represents the first true major buyout as they are thought of today.
Due to structural restrictions imposed on American banks under the GlassSteagall Act and
other regulations in the 1930s, there was no private merchant banking industry in the United
States, a situation that was quite exceptional in developed nations. As late as the 1980s,
Lester Thurow, a noted economist, decried the inability of the financial regulation framework
in the United States to support merchant banks. US investment banks were confined primarily
to advisory businesses, handling mergers and acquisitions transactions and placements of
equity and debt securities. Investment banks would later enter the space, however long after
independent firms had become well established.
With few exceptions, private equity in the first half of the 20th century was the domain of
wealthy individuals and families. The Vanderbilts, Whitneys, Rockefellers and Warburgs
were notable investors in private companies in the first half of the century. In 1938, Laurance
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S. Rockefeller helped finance the creation of both Eastern Air Lines and Douglas Aircraft and
the Rockefeller family had vast holdings in a variety of companies. Eric M. Warburg founded
E.M. Warburg & Co. in 1938, which would ultimately become Warburg Pincus, with
investments in both leveraged buyouts and venture capital.
program today.[6] The 1958 Act provided venture capital firms structured either as SBICs or
Minority Enterprise Small Business Investment Companies (MESBICs) access to federal
funds which could be leveraged at a ratio of up to 4:1 against privately raised investment
funds. The success of the Small Business Administration's efforts are viewed primarily in
terms of the pool of professional private equity investors that the program developed as the
rigid regulatory limitations imposed by the program minimized the role of SBICs. In 2005,
the SBA significantly reduced its SBIC program, though SBICs continue to make private
equity investments.
The real growth in Private Equity surged in 1984 to 1991 period when Institutional Investors,
e.g. Pension Plans, Foundations and Endowment Funds such as the Shell Pension Plan, the
Oregon State Pension Plan, the Ford Foundation and the Harvard Endowment Fund started
investing a small part of their trillion dollars portfolios into Private Investments - particularly
venture capital and Leverage Buyout Funds
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Substantial entry costs, with most private equity funds requiring significant initial
investment (usually upwards of $1,000,000) plus further investment for the first few
years of the fund.
Investments in limited partnership interests (which is the dominant legal form of
private equity investments) are referred to as "illiquid" investments which should earn
a premium over traditional securities, such as stocks and bonds. Once invested, it is
very difficult to gain access to your money as it is locked- up in long-term
investments which can last for as long as twelve years. Distributions are made only as
investments are converted to cash; limited partners typically have no right to demand
that sales be made.
If a private equity firm can't find good investment opportunities, it will not draw on an
investor's commitment. Given the risks associated with private equity investments, an
investor can lose all of its investment if the fund invests in failing companies. The risk
of loss of capital is typically higher in venture capital funds, which invest in
companies during the earliest phases of their development, and lower in mezzanine
capital funds, which provide interim investments to companies which have already
proven their viability but have yet to raise money from public markets.
Consistent with the risks outlined above, private equity can provide high returns, with
the best private equity managers significantly outperforming the public markets.
For the above mentioned reasons, private equity fund investment is for those who can
afford to have their capital locked in for long periods of time and who are able to risk
losing significant amounts of money. This is balanced by the potential benefits of
annual returns which range up to 30% for successful funds.
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enter new markets or finance a major acquisition without a change of control of the business.
Companies that seek growth capital will often do so in order to finance a transformational
event in their life cycle. These companies are likely to be more mature than venture capital
funded companies, able to generate revenue and operating profits but unable to generate
sufficient cash to fund major expansions, acquisitions or other investments. The primary
owner of the company may not be willing to take the financial risk alone. By selling part of
the company to private equity, the owner can take out some value and share the risk of
growth with partners.
4 .Distressed and Special Situations
Distressed or Special Situations are a broad category referring to investments in equity or
debt securities of financially stressed companies. The "distressed" category encompasses two
broad sub-strategies including:
6. Secondaries
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Secondary investments refer to investments made in existing private equity assets. These
transactions can involve the sale of private equity fund interests or portfolios of direct
investments in privately held companies through the purchase of these investments from
existing institutional investors. By its nature, the private equity asset class is illiquid, intended
to be a long-term investment for buy-and-hold investors. Secondary investments provide
institutional investors with the ability to improve vintage diversification, particularly for
investors that are new to the asset class. Secondaries also typically experience a different cash
flow profile, diminishing the effect of investing in new private equity funds. Often
investments in secondaries are made through third party fund vehicle, structured similar to a
fund of funds although many large institutional investors have purchased private equity fund
interests through secondary transactions. Sellers of private equity fund investments sell not
only the investments in the fund but also their remaining unfunded commitments to the funds.
The Functions of Private Equity
Private equity is often discussed in the financial and business press. At times it is maligned; at
other times, championed. Private equity has existed since capitalism began. Long before
public stock markets existed, companies had to tap private individuals and businesses for the
equity needed to start and grow their businesses. As this has morphed into more formal
private equity and venture capital firms that seek out businesses to invest in or buy, the
crucial functions still remain.
1 .Expansion Capital
Private equity and venture capital firms provide the funds that businesses need to finance
growth. Often firms that have inconsistent operating cash flow due to operational issues or
changing market conditions cannot qualify for enough bank financing. In addition, rapidly
growing businesses often use up their operating cash flow in acquiring assets or personnel.
Because their operating cash flow may turn negative due to these expenses, they also do not
qualify for debt financing. In addition, if these companies obtained all the financing they
needed in the form of debt, they may be unable to make the debt payments.
2 .Discipline
Private equity often provides the discipline companies need. For public companies taken
private through a private equity transaction, discipline is less of a function. These companies
had to meet the standards and expectations of the public markets. However, for many private
companies, those without external boards and oversight often operate the companies
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according to the owners whims. Owner-managers often have different criteria than those that
are purely shareholders. Private equity generally demands that companies operate efficiently
to drive an increase in shareholder value and put the personnel, systems and processes in
place to ensure this.
3 .Management
Private equity provides management. Many companies that private equity firms invest in
have thin layers of management. They often have the founder or founders in various roles and
may have one or more vice presidents. Private equity provides not only the capital to hire
more management, but also the expertise and resources to identify and screen management.
Private equity also may replace some or all of the current management with outsiders skilled
in a particular industry or market niche. In addition, private equity provides board members
with varying perspectives and insights.
4 .Contacts
Private equity provides contacts and resources. Fast-growing technology firms can harness
the know-how from a venture capitalist firms stable of past and current companies. These
firms can connect with industry insiders who can help the company obtain contracts,
partnerships and exposure that they would either not have had access to or would not have
known about.
5 .Overall Function
The overall function of private equity is to drive an increase in shareholder value. A
consequence of this is better capitalized, better managed, more resourceful and disciplined
companies. Beneficiaries of private equity grow faster and stronger, use the services of more
companies and employ more people. This creates a ripple effect, producing a significant
positive impact on the U.S. economy.
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4.Mature Financial markets - Capital markets have stabilized in the recent past with
regulators like SEBI keeping a firm watch on the market development. This means both
increased opportunities as well as an easier and painless exit route for PE funds. The
emergence of entrepreneurs in India who consider PE their full time occupation is also a
positive sign. Besides, there are well established corporate houses diversifying their surplus
investment, as a strategy for their assets allocation, through PE funds without involving
themselves directly in the operations of target companies.
5.Successful M&As- A recent spate of mergers and acquisitions has given rise to yet another
way of exiting from Indian companies for private equity investors.
6.Successful track record - The first generation of private equity players have realized
significant success in the last several years. For instance, Warburg Pincus earned huge returns
out from its investments in Indian companies like Bharti Telecom.
Advantages for Company:
Private equity managers are paid very well and so it is easy to attract high caliber,
experienced managers that tend to perform very well. The same goes for lower level
employees at private equity firms, they tend to be the top young business school graduates.
This helps the company to utilize best talent in the industry without shelling out even a single
penny from its pocket.
PE helps a company to prepare for stock market listing (IPO) as the exit route of investment.
It opens up enormous opportunities for companies to raise funds. The continuous scrutiny by
stock market participants, SEBI & ROC facilitates efficiency improvement and proper
strategic decisions.
PE helps those companies which cannot raise money from the market. By private equity
company get money from the investors, which help in the growth of the company.
DISADVANTAGES OF PRIVATE EQUITY
DISADVANTAGES FOR INVESTORS:
Difficult to access for small & medium investors- private equity Limited Partnership funds
may only be marketed to institutions and very wealthy individuals; in addition the minimum
investment accepted is usually more than 1mn.
1. Relative illiquidity Private Equity funds normally invest in a unlisted space and they find
it difficult to exit the investment at their wish, since it require concentrated efforts to find a
suitable investor for unlisted company. Even in the listed space, the impact cost remains very
high due to sheer magnitude of scale.
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A long term investment perspective is necessary to achieve gains for a private equity
investment programme because the investment programme depends on the company growth.
It depends on the gap between entry and exit of the investor.
2.Political condition - India, being divided into a number of states, causes an investment
decision to be affected by politics. Changes in regulation and infrastructure development are
often sidelined due to friction and conflict between the state and the federal government.
3.Competition from China - China is a direct competitor of India and most of the private
equity investors, eyeing the Asian region, draw a comparison across both the countries to
decide where their money should be parked. The new state-of- the-art airports in China bear a
stark contrast to the abysmal conditions of the terminals in Indias main cities.
4.High costs - private equity managers charge relatively high fees for managing capital
committed by external investors (generally around 2%) and, if the fund performs well, take a
sizeable proportion (generally 20%) of realised returns in excess of investment hurdle rates.
Disadvantages for Company:
It is a lengthy process since private equity managers conduct detailed market, financial, legal,
environmental and management due diligence, which could take several months before they
make final decisions on investing.
Entrepreneurs have to give up some of their companys shares to a private equity investor, i.e.
control. Because investor have some control over the company, so it is not easy for the
entrepreneur to take decision independently. He have to take advice of the investor to take
decision and it causes delay in the process.
The private equity managers have control over the timing of a sale of (a part of) the business.
Lack of promotion in investment across sectors - PE funds are being channelized into only a
few sectors like IT, infrastructure & real estate and telecommunications, to the exclusion of
the remaining industries, desperately in need of funds for growth.
CHAPTER 7:
STAGES AND PROCESS OF PRIVATE EQUITY INVESTMENT
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DCLR
ECNR
TNSP
SGNR
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1. Seed stage
Financing provided to research, assess and develop an initial concept before a business has
reached the start-up phase.
2. Start-up stage
Financing for product development and initial marketing.
3. Expansion stage
Financing for growth and expansion of a company which is breaking even or trading
profitably.
4. Replacement capital
Purchase of shares from another investor or to reduce gearing via the refinancing of debt.
PROCESS OF PRIVATE EQUITY INVESTMENT
The Private Equity Process in 6 Steps:
1. Deal Origination (Deal Sourcing)
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Deal Origination or as some call it Deal Sourcing is how Deal Makers get their deals, a
potential deal can either come through a company owner approaching them or from an
intermediary who will try to bring both parties (Company and Deal Maker) to make the deal.
In some cases, they may just approach companies who are expanding fast and wish to grow
further. In a year, Deal Makers come across hundreds of potential deals - but only a few are
selected.
2. Due Diligence
Due Diligence is what you could call doing your homework. Before starting detailed
negotiations, investor try to make sure everything is fair and secure. Although Auditors and
Consultants are appointed to conduct the Financial, Tax, Legal and Technical Due Diligence they also work side by side to understand the target company and its industry better. All the
information collected at this time, is then used during negotiation.
3. Deal Negotiation
At the Deal Negotiation phase, investor set out the terms and conditions (covenants,
representations and warranties) and other deal terms that defines (or makes the deal).
Contracts such as Investment Agreement, Share Purchase Agreement, Management
Agreement, Advisory Agreement etc are drafted to include all items that put the deal together.
4. Deal Closing (Acquisition)
Deal Closing is probably the easiest part but also contains an element of risk. Its the
conclusion of the deal, the signing of all Agreements and transferring funds from the buyer to
seller, conducting other administrative functions (usually done by a separate entity) like
updating any articles of association etc.
5. Post Acquisition Monitoring AND Exit (IPO, Trade Sale or Buy back)
Post Acquisition Monitoring requires the Deal Team (those who have worked on putting the
deal together) to closely monitor the company, both from an operational and financial point
of view against the expansion plan and budgets that were setup earlier by the company.
Improvements to business, from Corporate Governance, Financial Reporting, and
Information Flow to Strategy are made at each level through either the companys
management or its board.
As the company matures (usually after 2 - 4 years) with the presence of the Deal Team,
investor prepare it for an Exit - either an IPO or a Trade Sale (sale to a larger party, multinational or conglomerate) or in rare cases a Buy Back by the owners. By this time, the
company will have grown quite a bit with still plenty of room to grow further. (Theres a
saying, in a deal - always leave something extra for the person buying - it makes everyone
happy.)
And once investor have exited the company, they return their money with the profit they
gained for company after taking their fees for all the effort put in the above process.
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Although this may seem like a linear process - it isnt exactly so, primarily because investors
deal with a number of companies and each one is at a different stage in the private equity
process.
PEs not only provides resources of funds to the new ventures but also focuses on
identifying and upgrading both product/process innovation and management functions
innovation but through other functions that lie at the core of high tech Development.
PEs Bridge between sources of finance, entrepreneurs, scientists, suppliers, and
customers by providing not only the required sources of funds but also an added value
advisory/consultancy
services
and
to
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There are two types of listed private equity investment companies - those which invest
directly in companies and those that invest in funds which invest in companies (fund of
funds). Some private equity investment companies invest in both direct investments and
funds offering a hybrid of the two approaches set out below. Direct investors The investment
company has a private equity team who invest directly in companies, subject to the stated
objective of the company. The managers aim is to help these companies develop and
progress, and sometimes restructure, in order to increase the long-term value of the
companies so these companies can be sold at a profit. Fund of funds investors In a fund of
funds, the investment company invests in a portfolio of private equity funds which invest in
companies. Funds of funds aim to diversify across a range of investment strategies and
different sectors providing access to a range of managers.
Investing in PE Funds
Direct Investment Top 10 Private Equity Deals
The top 10 private equity deals accounted for more than 36% of total private equity deals in
2009. In 2008, top 10 deals accounted for about 40% of total deal value for the year
The largest deal by value was KKRs $255 mn buyout of Aricent, followed by Siva Ventures
investment in S Tel Ltd. and TPGs $200 mn investment in Indiabulls Real Estate.
Top deals occurred across various sectors, with 3 of the top 10 deals in Real Estate.
WAYS OF EXIT
There are different ways in which a private equity investor can exit from an investment:
A. Trade sale A trade sale, also referred to as M&A (Mergers & Acquisitions), of privately
held company equity is the most popular type of exit strategy and refers to the sale of
company shares to industrial investors. The trade sale is agreed in private and makes both the
buyer and the seller less vulnerable to the external pressures of a stock market flotation. It is
often advisable to keep the transaction a closely guarded secret because clients, suppliers and
employees may interpret a trade sale negatively. These negative signals become even stronger
if the negotiations fail.
B. Entrepreneur or Management Buy-Out The Buy-Out of the funds stake by its management
team is becoming more and more successful as an exit strategy. It is a very attractive exit for
both the investment manager and the companys management team if the company can
guarantee regular cash flows and can mobilize sufficient loans. The accounting and financial
aspects of this exit need to be studied very carefully.
C. Sale of the investment to another financial purchaser (called a secondary market investor)
One financial investor may sell his equity stake to another one when the company has
reached the stage of development or when the current development of the company no longer
corresponds to the investment criteria of the original fund. This can also occur if the financial
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support required maintaining the companys development has exceeded the capacity of the
fund. This strategy has the advantage of enabling an exit when the team does not want a trade
sale or a stock market flotation.
D. IPO (Initial Public Offering): flotation on a public stock market A stock market flotation
may be the most spectacular exit, but it is far from being the most widely used, even in stock
market booms.
A stock market flotation should correspond with a genuine wish to make the company more
dynamic over the long term and to profit from the growth possibilities offered by a stock
market. Therefore, the equity share placed on the market (the float) must be sufficiently large
to ensure liquidity the reward for appealing to the market. A flotation is not an end in itself
but the beginning of a long process of development. A stock market flotation always leaves
company open to the risk of an unwanted bid whereas equity held by an investor that
company has chosen can be better managed. If company decides to opt for this route, it must
be minutely prepared over a long period.
E.Liquidation is obviously the least favourable option and occurs when the efforts of the head
of the company and the investors to save the company have not succeeded.
REASONS FOR PRIVATE EQUITY PLAYERS ENTERING INTO INDIA
The strong interest in India has resulted in very bullish stock market conditions, with trading
volumes increasing substantially. This has eased exit possibilities, with most of the early
domestic and foreign entrants such as Actis Partners, Warburg Pincus, Citigroup Venture
Capital, Barings and West Bridge Capital reaping significant multiples on their investments.
It is little wonder that other global private equity players such as 3i, Blackstone and Goldman
Sachs have been setting up shop in India, each with deep pockets.
The most of the private firms in India is still in the need of capital to expand them, in spite of
having the required technology, labour and knowledge they are not able to become productive
to the economy. Thus the advent of private equity players has provided an opportunity for
these firms to grow with the economy.
Private Equity players have came to India with a research back up and thus they know the
potential of these firms and thus there has been reduction in the corpus amount invested in
China than in India, which definitely gives a hunch where the Indian economy is booming.
both critics of the private equity industry and fellow investors in private equity. An ill-timed
birthday event around the time of the IPO led various commentators to draw comparisons to
the excesses of notorious executives including Bernie Ebbers (WorldCom) and Dennis
Kozlowski (Tyco International). David Rubenstein, the founder of Carlyle Group remarked,
"We have all wanted to be private at least until now. When Steve Schwarzman's biography
with all the dollar signs is posted on the web site none of us will like the furor that results
and that's even if you like Rod Stewart."
Meanwhile, other private equity investors would also seek to realize a portion of the value
locked into their firms. In September 2007, the Carlyle Group sold a 7.5% interest in its
management company to Mubadala Development Company, which is owned by the Abu
Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) for $1.35 billion, which valued Carlyle at approximately
$20 billion. Similarly, in January 2008, Silver Lake Partners sold a 9.9% stake in its
management company to CalPERS for $275 million.
Additionally, Apollo Management completed a private placement of shares in its
management company in July 2007. By pursuing a private placement rather than a public
offering, Apollo would be able to avoid much of the public scrutiny applied to Blackstone
and KKR. In April 2008, Apollo filed with the SEC to permit some holders of its privately
traded stock to sell their shares on the New York Stock Exchange. In April 2004, Apollo
raised $930 million for a listed business development company, Apollo Investment
Corporation NASDAQ: AINV, to invest primarily in middle-market companies in the form
of mezzanine debt and senior secured loans, as well as by making direct equity investments in
companies. The Company also invests in the securities of public companies.
equity) or route their investments through domestic venture capital funds and companies.
Before guidelines were issued in September 2000, direct exposure by offshore private equity
funds in shares of unlisted companies was treated as a foreign direct investment and had to be
approved in line with the Governments general policy on foreign investments. Indocean
Venture Fund (now Indocean Chase), originally set up by George Soros and Chemical Bank
in October 1994, was the first such overseas private equity fund.
3. The regulatory environment for the private equity industry was simplified in 19952000.
Foreign institutional investors participated in the growth of the private equity industry
through the foreign direct investment regulations of the Government and the simplified tax
administration procedures under the Indo- Mauritius Double Taxation Avoidance Treaty.
While the foreign direct investment route offered minimum investment restrictions for private
equity funds, exit pricing and repatriation of capital were regulated by the Reserve Bank of
India (RBI). To bring these capital flows under the regulation of the venture capital industry,
new SEBI regulations were issued with simplified exit pricing and repatriation procedures for
foreign investors.
4. Following amendments to the 2000 budget, the Government has allowed private equity
funds pass-through status, meaning that the distributed or undistributed income of the funds
is not taxed. To avoid double taxation, the income of a private equity fund is taxed only in the
hands of the investor.
5. SEBI was also made the sole regulatory authority, and private equity funds must submit
quarterly reports to it. In September 2000 SEBI announced the guidelines that now govern
venture capital investment, based on the January 2000 recommendations of the Chandra
shekhar committee on venture capital. After another set of amendments in April 2004, the
following rules now apply:
(i) Foreign venture capital investors can invest in India without the need for approval from
the Foreign Investment Promotion Board if they register with SEBI.
(ii) Each investor in a venture fund must invest at least Rs 500,000, and each fund must have
at least Rs50 mn in capital.
(iii) A fund may invest in one company up to 25% of the funds capital. It cannot invest in
associated companies of ventures that it finances.
(iv) A fund must invest 66.67% (lowered from 75% in April 2004) of its investible funds in
unlisted equity or equity-linked instruments. The remaining 33.3% can be invested in
subscriptions to initial public offerings (IPOs) of companies or in debt instruments of a
company in which the venture fund has already made an equity investment.
(v) The April 2004 amendments removed the previous 1-year lockup period for IPO
subscriptions. They also allowed investments within the 33.3% category in preferential
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allotments of equity shares of a listed company, subject to a 1-year lock-in, and in equity
shares or equity-linked instruments of a listed company that is financially weak.
(vi) The removal of the profitability criterion as a listing requirement had an important effect
on the private equity industry as it provided an exit mechanism for investors. To replace the
profitability requirement, a firm would be delisted if it did not earn a profit within 3 years of
listing.
(vii) The acquisition of shares in a venture fund by the investee company or its promoters is
exempt from the provisions of the takeover code and will therefore not mandate an open
offer.
(viii) Mutual funds may invest 5% of the capital of an open-ended scheme and 10% of the
capital of a closed-ended scheme in a venture fund.
(ix) In April 2004 the SEBI also removed some previous restrictions and allowed venture
funds to invest in real estate companies, gold financing companies, and equipment leasing
and hire-purchase companies registered with the RBI.
6. These regulations have significantly improved the regulatory environment for private
equity funds operating in India, such as BTS India Private Equity Fund. In addition, they
reflect the strong commitment of the Indian Government to support the provision of longterm equity finance to domestic entrepreneurial companies
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rights of PE investors.
PE/VC funds holding more than a 20% shareholding in the investee company will be
deemed to be associate companies. PE/VC funds holding less than 20% may also be
deemed associate companies if they hold veto rights in connection with business
decisions of the investee company. Certain disclosures in relation to the associate
companies will need to be made by an investee company in its balance sheets. If the
PE/VC fund has been incorporated as a company, then financial statements of the
fund will have to be prepared on a consolidated basis and include details of the
associate companies.
An extensive definition of the term promoter to include:
Any person named as a promoter in the annual returns of the company;
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Any person who has control over the affairs of the company, directly or
1.
as a promoter.
Several compliances have been extended to private companies that previously only
applied to public companies. For example, a preferential allotment of shares, as well as an
issue of debentures, is not permitted without shareholders' approval, even for investment in a
2.
private company.
The corporate governance framework has been made much more strict. For example,
restrictions are now imposed on directors entering into forward contracts in relation to the
company's securities. Common law duties of directors have now been codified and breach of
3.
4.
and so on.
Restriction on a company making investments through more than two layers of
5.
investment companies.
Members and depositors of a company are entitled to bring class action suits, if they
believe the management or affairs of a company are being carried out in a manner prejudicial
to the interests of the company, or of the members. This may give rise to additional vexatious
litigation by shareholders in a public company/minority shareholders in a company.
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The title and ownership of the underlying securities is held continuously by the selling
party for a minimum period of one year from the date of entering into the contract.
The price or consideration payable for the sale or purchase of the underlying
securities pursuant to the exercise of any option is in compliance with all the applicable laws.
The contract is settled by way of actual delivery of the underlying securities.
The SEBI Notification specifically excludes from its scope any contract entered into before
the date of the SEBI Notification. Therefore, the SEBI Notification does not protect option
agreements made before 3 October 2013 from enforceability challenges.
In 2013, the Supreme Court of India clarified that the SCRA and the rules, regulations and
notifications issued under it also apply to unlisted public companies (see Bhagwati
Developers Private Limited v. Peerless General Finance and Investment Company (2013) 9
SCC 584)). Accordingly, the SEBI Notification also applies to an option contract of an
unlisted public company.
RBI, on 30 December 2013, the Foreign Exchange Management (Transfer or Issue of
Security by a Person Resident outside India) (Seventeenth Amendment) Regulations 2013
(Seventeenth Amendment) were issued. Further, on 9 January 2014, the Reserve Bank of
India (RBI) issued a circular (Circular) dealing with the pricing of optionality clauses.
In terms of the Seventeenth Amendment read with the Circular, shares or convertible
debentures containing an optionality clause, but without any assured exit price, can be issued
by an Indian company to a person resident outside India under the FDI route. The pricing
guidelines applicable to such options, as well as a lock-in period of one year from the date of
allotment of such instruments, have also been specified. The pricing differs on the basis of the
instrument in question (that is, equity shares or preference shares and debentures).
The Circular clarifies that existing contracts will have to comply with conditions of the
Circular to comply with the existing Indian foreign exchange laws. Therefore, parties to the
contract are modifying their contract (to the extent necessary) to comply with the Circular
and the Seventeenth Amendment. The applicability of this Circular to Foreign Venture
Capital Investors (FVCI) is not clear and clarity is awaited on this point.
draft GAAR proposed under the Finance Act 2012 and to recommend suitable changes.
Certain rules that provide for monitoring of the GAAR were notified in 2013 and are to come
into effect on 1 April 2016.
considered by
the government.
The announcement of
the
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The ease of fund raising depends on a number of factors like the size of the fund, reputation
of the fund sponsor, past returns and the team of general partners managing it.
Managing funding risk:
A number of private equity firms maintain a group of preferred set of limited partners of the
fund, those which are more predictable than others.
Firms prefer raising large funds during better economic conditions and draw capital in form
of capital calls, during the life of the fund rather than raising smaller sized funds.
Many firms tweak their compensation structure during down cycles, making it attractive for
limited partners of the fund. From the regular 2% management fee and 20% carry, firms are
seen to reduce the fixed management fee to 1 1.5% keeping the carry same or increasing it
slightly.
Many big firms maintain a level of overhang, or raised but not invested capital. This gives
them a competitive advantage of investing in difficult times, when there is not much capital
around and valuations are low.
B. Risks of adverse economic cycles and exit environment
The major source of this risk comes from the fact that an economy goes through cycles, and
valuations of the same cash flows may differ considerably. Control premium paid by private
equity investors are much higher during boom times, than times of recession. This is largely
because of investing activity gains high momentum during formation of bubbles.
Mitigation of risk of funding cycles:
To mitigate this risk of economic cycles, the following practices are adopted by private equity
groups:
Invest uniformly across economic cycles. They do not invest in spurts.
Invest based on valuations of future cash flows of the company and not just on comparables
and multiples as market comparables may sometimes be misleading.
Avoid competitive bidding; co-invest in deals of large magnitude.
Have concrete exit plans in place, with key milestones and targets for the portfolio.
C. Risks originating from the industry segments:
There are a number of private equity firms which specialize in a particular industry, or an
industry segment or even a particular product category. This is mostly to leverage their
understanding of that particular segment. It has been shown that this strategy is better
compared to a diversified investment strategy, as it is easy for investors to diversify their
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portfolio at their level. But being too specific brings risks associated with that particular
segment.
Companies that specialize in certain industries carry additional risks of facing downturns in
that particular industry. For instance, many PE firms invested only in high-technology
companies during the dot com bubble of 2001 when valuations were at their peak. After the
bubble burst there was little value left in their portfolio and many tech focused VC and PE
firms shut down. An evidence of this can be shown from the vintage year ratio chart;
investments of the 1999 - 2001 vintage have resulted in distributions less than those of the
invested capital.
Mitigation risk from investing in industry segments:
While investing in a particular industry segment, private equity firms invest uniformly
across economic cycles. Diversify within the industry segment.
Invest across seed, early and late stage companies in that particular segment.
D. Risks originating from portfolio companies
A number of risks may emerge from inside of the investee companies.
These risks include:
Technology Risk Risk of the technology not seeing light of the day or not being
commercially viable.
Mitigating portfolio risks: The way a firm deals with these risks defines its portfolio
management philosophy and helps it create a difference. Some of the best practices
while dealing with the above risks are:
Technology risks: Invest in technologies which they understand, or get opinion from
external experts. Stage investments in parts and set milestones for the management
team. Invest in competing technologies with smaller ticket sizes. Invest in developing
an ecosystem. Invest across different stages in their lifecycle seed, early, late and
mature stage companies.
Marketrisks: Work closely with the management team, help it develop prototypes
and get feedback from key customer samples. Help the investee develop a sustaining
business model, leveraging on its industry experience.
Company risks: Private equity partners invest a lot of time and effort with each of
their portfolio companies managing unique risks faced by them, with respect to
management and technical team, capital structure, cost and revenue management, etc.
Incentives of management team are often re-aligned with those of the investors,
usually by way of granting equity options as part of their compensation. Performance
based milestones are often set for the management team to achieve.
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CAPTER 13:
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PRIVATE EQUITY AND VENTURE CAPITAL
Venture capital can be viewed as a segment of private equity, from an academic point of view.
But for the purpose of making investment decisions, their respective characteristics are
sufficiently distinctive that we should treat them as separate asset classes. Those characteristics
include target companies, risk-reward profiles, minimum capital contributions, deal structures,
liquidity, tax benefits, control vs. minority share acquired, investor expertise, and others. (See
comparison chart below.)
In simplest terms, private equity is capital that is invested in private companies. By private
companies, I mean companies whose ownership shares or units are not traded publicly, because
the owners want to restrict the number and/or kinds of people who can invest in them. Private
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equity investors tend to target fairly mature companies, which may be under-performing or
under-valued, with the goal of improving their profitability and selling them for a return on their
investment (capital gain) or in some cases, splitting them apart and selling their assets at a
profit. Venture investors, on the other hand, target early-stage and expanding companies (often
pre-revenue) with fast-growth potential, with the objective of nurturing and growing them
quickly, then selling them in M&A deals or taking them public.
Venture Capital
Target
companies
Target
industries
ROI
Investment
size ($)
Liquidity
horizon
6 to 10 years
4 to 7 years
Share
acquired by
investor/fund
Funding
structure
Investor
active?
expectation*
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Diagram of a simple secondary market transfer of a limited partnership fund interest. The
buyer exchanges a single cash payment to the seller for both the investments in the fund plus
any unfunded commitments to the fund.
Main article: Private equity secondary market
The private equity secondary market (also often called private equity secondaries) refers to
the buying and selling of pre-existing investor commitments to private equity and other
alternative investment funds. Sellers of private equity investments sell not only the
investments in the fund but also their remaining unfunded commitments to the funds. By its
nature, the private equity asset class is illiquid, intended to be a long-term investment for
buy-and-hold investors. For the vast majority of private equity investments, there is no listed
public market; however, there is a robust and maturing secondary market available for sellers
of private equity assets.
Increasingly, secondaries are considered a distinct asset class with a cash flow profile that is
not correlated with other private equity investments. As a result, investors are allocating
capital to secondary investments to diversify their private equity programs. Driven by strong
demand for private equity exposure, a significant amount of capital has been committed to
secondary investments from investors looking to increase and diversify their private equity
exposure.
Investors seeking access to private equity have been restricted to investments with structural
impediments such as long lock-up periods, lack of transparency, unlimited leverage,
concentrated holdings of illiquid securities and high investment minimums.
Secondary transactions can be generally split into two basic categories:
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Investor categories
US, Canadian and European public and private pension schemes have invested in the asset
class since the early 1980s to diversify away from their core holdings (public equity and fixed
income).[81] Today pension investment in private equity accounts for more than a third of all
monies allocated to the asset class, ahead of other institutional investors such as insurance
companies, endowments, and sovereign wealth funds.
Investment timescales
Returns on private equity investments are created through one or a combination of three
factors that include: debt repayment or cash accumulation through cash flows from
operations, operational improvements that increase earnings over the life of the investment
and multiple expansion, selling the business for a higher multiple of earnings than was
originally paid. A key component of private equity as an asset class for institutional investors
is that investments are typically realized after some period of time, which will vary
depending on the investment strategy. Private equity investments are typically realized
through one of the following avenues:
an initial public offering (IPO) shares of the company are offered to the public,
typically providing a partial immediate realization to the financial sponsor as well as a
public market into which it can later sell additional shares;
a merger or acquisition the company is sold for either cash or shares in another
company;
a recapitalization cash is distributed to the shareholders (in this case the financial
sponsor) and its private equity funds either from cash flow generated by the company
or through raising debt or other securities to fund the distribution.
Large institutional asset owners such as pension funds (with typically long-dated liabilities),
insurance companies, sovereign wealth and national reserve funds have a generally low
likelihood of facing liquidity shocks in the medium term, and thus can afford the required
long holding periods characteristic of private equity investment.
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RANKS
PRIVATE
HEADQUARTER FUNDS
TPG
Fort Worth
$ 52352
New York
$ 48993
Washington DC
$ 47732
New York
$ 40460
New York
$ 35183
Brain Capital
Boston
$ 34949
London
$ 33726
New York
$ 30800
Warburg pincus
New York
$ 23000
10
Apax partners
London
$ 21336
Because private equity firms are continuously in the process of raising, investing and
distributing their private capital rose can often be the easiest to measure. Other metrics can
include the total value of companies purchased by a firm or an estimate of the size of a firm's
active portfolio plus capital available for new investments. As with any list that focuses on
size, the list does not provide any indication as to relative investment performance of these
funds or managers.
Additionally, Preqin (formerly known as Private Equity Intelligence) an independent data
provider, ranks the 25 largest private equity investment managers. Among the larger firms in
that ranking were Alp Invest Partners, AXA Private Equity, AIG Investments, Goldman Sachs
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Private Equity Group and Pantheon. The European Private Equity and Venture Capital
Association ("EVCA") publishes a yearbook which analyses industry trends derived from
data disclosed by over 1, 300 European private equity funds.
PE Impact on DCBL
Dalmia Cement (Bharat) Ltd. (DCBL), and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. L.P. (together
with its affiliates, KKR) announced the signing of a definitive agreement under which
KKR has agreed to invest up to Rs 7,500 mn in DCBLs wholly owned unlisted subsidiary
(Company) which will house post restructuring DCBLs 9MTPA cement manufacturing
capacity, DCBLs stake in OCL India Limited (5.3MTPA capacity) along with the upcoming
green field projects of 10MTPA across the country. The use of proceeds will be for both
organic/inorganic growth and de-leveraging.
When we realigned our businesses in March, 2010, one of our goals was to create separate
pure play entities that could thrive on their own and have flexibility to raise capital. This
transaction with KKR is not just about capital but the foundation of a long term relationship.
It will enable us to enhance our capacity and market share through organic as well as
inorganic routes, while benefiting from KKRs global network and proven value creation
capabilities, said Mr. PuneetDalmia, MD of Dalmia Cement (Bharat) Limited.
We are excited to be working with a dynamic and entrepreneurial family with a successful
execution track record in India. While the cement industry by nature is cyclical, this is a longterm investment in a great family business, its management team and in Indias economy.
This is a way to invest behind and contribute to the continued development of Indias
residential, commercial, and public sector infrastructure, said Mr. Sanjay Nayar, CEO of
KKR India.
vision and professionalization. At the second stage, the team needs to be willing to take risks
and follow the founders vision. Professionals are likely to be too risk- averse to do so as
failure would hurt their long-term career prospects. At the third stage, once the vision has
been implemented, professionals need to take charge.
It was at that third stage that Paras sought Actis as a PE investor to enable the transformation
to a professionally-run company. In fact, the money was the minor part of the transaction in a
sense, since it was used primarily to buy out the promoters holding rather than to be infused
into the company (the company was already cash rich). Paras required the PE firm to possess
a deep understanding of the industry as well as understand the company, both of which Actis
possessed. As a company insider notes: PE is expensive money: it should only be used if it
comes with other benefits.
PE backing provided the company credibility as a professionally run-organization and there
was an influx of younger, highly trained talent that replaced family recruits. Paras
recruitment of the best quality professionals led to positive impacts on operational
management with a greater focus on efficiency, tighter financial controls, brand leveraging
and an improved marketing and distribution strategy.
The transformation of Paras from a family run to professional company faced the challenges
of cultural transformation and was not a simple task but accomplished by focusing on these
key areas and showed clear results. EBITDA margins rose from 20 percent prior to PE
funding to about 30 percent afterwards. Subsequent to the Actis investment, the company has
also expanded internationally, especially in the Middle East and North Africa.
Impact of PE on Paras
As is evident from the above, Actis impact was transformative in the sense of changing how
the company was run, while being supportive of a quality that was already ingrained, that of
conceptualizing and developing a range of high-margin products that could successfully
compete with large players, many of which are global organizations. Actis achieved its
transformation by getting to know the company, and then bringing in talent in selected areas
that were critical for raising margins and enabling the efficient introduction of new products,
while retaining the innovative core intact. Among the many positive effects was a change in
practice in procurement, governance and reporting, thus enabling a stronger brand being
built? As a result, revenue growth rates rose to 40 percent and gross margins rose by 10
percent. Actis also supported the strategic shift in sales and distribution networks; as well as
international expansion. Critically, Actis was able to bring in a sophisticated board support
through a domain expert and bring on board a prominent business leader (who is their
advisor) as an advisor to the company.
Impact of PE on the industry
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The investment shows that a domestic company can succeed while competing with global
organizations. Although there are other successful examples, such as Dabur, Paras is a special
case of achieving this through professionalizing a family-run firm in a credible way, with a
majority of non-family ownership, while retaining the benefits of incorporating the initial
promoters into the core management structure.
By late 2007, the ongoing pressure of competition and lower than expected growth forced Air
Deccan into significant losses. In 2008, the company was merged into Kingfisher Airlines, a
premium domestic airline. Kingfisher was attracted by Air Deccans large fleet that enabled
Kingfisher to rapidly scale up its operations. Although the initial understanding was that Air
Deccan would be the budget brand of Kingfisher, it was later rebranded with the Kingfisher
name.
Impact of PE on Air Deccan
The PE investment in Air Deccan brought both operational and fiscal discipline. PE firms
helped setup a proper organization structure and created a formal business plan. The
financing enabled Air Deccan to pursue its aggressive business model of running a budget
airline.
Impact of PE on the industry
Air Deccan had a big impact on the industry. Its no-frills flights focus on second-tier cities,
and aggressive pricing led to aggressive growth and spurred the entry of comparable budget
airlines. Its practices were imitated by established competitors and became part of industry
practice. The result was a fall in the average cost of air travel in India. To a significant extent,
these new business approaches were enabled by the initial round of funding and the models
that were introduced by PE financiers seeking to imitate the success of budget airlines in
other countries. Thus, we may conclude that PE significantly impacted the industry.
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favorable to banks than to NBFCs. However, the company was undercapitalized at the time
of receiving the PE investment.
The company subsequently received multiple rounds of PE investment. In 2005, PE firm
Chrys Capital invested USD 30 mn for a 17 percent holding in STF. It exited in 2008-09.
Global PE major TPG invested USD 100 mn in 2006 and, as of 2010, remains an active
investor. TPG was interested in the financial sector in India, but the banking regulations
prevented it from buying a large holding in a regulated bank. TPG was attracted by STFs
stability in terms of customers and credit-ratings, in the midst of the NBFC meltdown at the
time. STF further attracted TPG because of its reputation of integrity, efficient management
and customer loyalty.
The first PE funds were used by STF to integrate its regional operations and control them
from its home base in Tamil Nadu, as well as to consider international expansion. The second
round of investing, from TPG, brought in high standards of credit evaluation and corporate
governance. TPGs portfolio of Asian finance firms, such as First Bank, Korea, provided it
with the experience to establish these stronger standards. These were needed as the
management was largely promoter dominated, which made credit rating agencies and
investors somewhat cautious. Also, their securitization business was relatively undeveloped.
Helped by better practices, STFs portfolio, which was at USD 1 billion in assets when TPG
invested, had risen to USD 6.5 billion by 2010.
Impact of PE on STF
PE initially enabled a national strategy, when Chrys Capital invested in STF. Till then, STFs
four regional entities operated independently. Thus, in the words of a company insider:
Chrys Capital provided capital during the growth phase of STF.
TPGs investment transformed the company through better internal management practices
and corporate governance. The same insider notes that, where Chrys Capital enabled growth,
TPG added value. TPG helped in improving the credit rating of the company and
developing the companys securitization business. TPG, therefore, is an example of a PE
investor with deep pockets and experience in running financial firms in Asia and elsewhere
bringing these advantages to STF.
Impact of PE on the industry
STF is the countrys largest player in commercial vehicle finance. The primary impact of the
PE investment on the industry was to begin the transformation of the business from a
fragmented, money-lender dependent business to a more organized business.
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CONCLUSION:
With its solid performance during the study period of 2010 to 2014, the Indian PE has reemerged in good shape from testing times of the global credit melt down and subsequent
economic problems. While the period ahead looks bright, It remains to be seen whether
current condition will prove to be a strong platform for sustain growth. Certainly, the Indian
growth story remains on track and continue to attract PE interest. New opportunities several
underpenetrated sectors like infrastructure, financial services, health care and manufacturing
are waiting to be tapped and appear to be generating and increased level of PE engagement.
The PE industry itself is demonstrating interesting signs of growth and evolution. The
number of domestic funds continue to expand, With the experience gained in the global PE
funds are spinning out new breakout funds and promoters are warming up to the idea that PE
partners are more than just another source of capital and can help them achieve exceptional
growth, way beyond what the promoters can achieve alone
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BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Books and Magazine:
An Introduction to Investment bank ,Hedge fund and Private equity.
Business Knowledge and IT in Private Equity.
Financial Economics.
The Economic time.
The Times of India.
Websites:
www.monetcontrol.com
www.sebi.gov.in
www.privateequityinfo.com
www.rbi.org.in
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APPENDIX
1 .The Economic Times Aug 25, 2014.
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"We had initially focused on tier-II and tier-III markets, which were our target markets. There
is still a great supply gap in those markets," Dhirendra Singh, the company's managing
director and founder, told ETin an interview in May.
Manpasand is expected to earn revenue of around Rs 500 crore in FY15, up from about Rs
300 crore in the previous year. The firm has been able to build a strong network in small
towns and rural markets, where the majority of its revenue comes from.
With the equity capital markets booming, private equity-backed companies will be looking to
tap the markets through public issue.
2 .The Times Of India Aug 04, 2014.
L&T Infrastructure Finance looks to raise $1 billion in a private equity fund
MUMBAI: L&T Infrastructure Finance is looking to raise roughly $1 billion in a private
equity (PE) fund focused on investing in power, roads, ports and other projects, three people
with direct knowledge of the matter said, with the sector set to pick up as the new
government gets cracking on improving India's creaking facilities.
The infrastructure finance arm of engineering giant Larsen & Toubro resumed the fundraising exercise after the general election and aims to finish by next year. The money is
expected to be raised from domestic and foreign institutional investors. A senior executive at
a global secondaries fund, a direct investor in such PE funds, confirmed that it was one of
those approached.
"Some of the global pension funds, sovereign wealth funds and family offices have (also)
been approached for the fund raising," the executive said. There is renewed interest in
infrastructure with the Narendra Modi government keen to ensure that projects stuck for
years get going again so that the country can take advantage of an economic turnaround that's
looking increasingly likely, given the economic and industrial data.
Delays in execution, mostly due to lack of government approval, and high-debt levels have
plagued infrastructure companies over the past few years. Investor confidence has been
dented, leading to a slump in capital expenditure. This meant that the L&T Infra PE fund had
met with muted investor demand when it was launched last year.
"The change in government has helped revive the mood. However, only when positive policy
measures are undertaken will investors come back to India," said a limited partner (LP) who
was approached by L&T Infra. "The fund size could come down due to the lack of investor
appetite for infra at this point of time." Limited partners contribute money to PE funds.
An L&T Infra Finance spokesperson said by email: "We had a first closing of approximately
Rs 500 crore from domestic investors. We are assessing the interest of international investors
given the change in their outlook towards India and will begin the formal process after
completing the first-level assessment." India holds opportunity for PE funds in the sector,
according to Global consulting firm Deloitte.
"Private equity represents a modest share of the $1-trillion to be spent on infrastructure in
2012-17, about half of which would come from private sector funds, compared with a target
of one-third in the previous five years," it had said in a report.
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Betting on a massive need for electricity, roads, ports, irrigation, water supply and sanitation
projects, other PE companies such as IDFC Alternatives, ICICI Venture and IL&FS have
either recently raised funds or are in the process of doing so. But investors won't be jumping
back in with their eyes closed. "The investor is selective with capital this time around.
We will not see the kind of euphoria we saw in the previous cycle," said a managing director
at an infrastructure-focused PE fund. The subdued sentiment is also because existing
infrastructure-focused funds have failed to deliver. "The returns are nowhere in sight and the
report card for most funds is in the red," the fund manager said. "Unless we get a strong push
from the government, the infra story will not play out."
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