South China Morning Post

SOUTHEAST ASIAN GROWTH DRAWING PRIVATE CAPITAL

Hedging of China risk amid geopolitic­al tensions also attracting investors, but lack of exit options is a drawback, data services firm PitchBook says

- Ben Jiang ben.jiang@scmp.com

The Southeast Asia market has become increasing­ly attractive for private capital in recent years, owing to the region’s economic growth and investors hedging against China amid geopolitic­al tensions, according to data services provider PitchBook.

From 2015 to 2021, deals that include private equity and venture capital investment­s more than tripled in the region, from 629 to 1,935, and reached US$34.1 billion in deal value by the end of 2022, a PitchBook report published yesterday said.

The surge comes amid robust economic growth in the region. From 2015 to 2023, Southeast Asia’s gross domestic product has grown more than 56 per cent, from US$2.5 trillion to US$3.9 trillion, according to data from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Investor interest also comes from the region’s relatively young, growing population and nascent technology ecosystems.

The median age of Southeast Asia’s nearly 700 million people is under 30 years old, nearly a decade younger than in China and the US, and two decades younger than the median age for Japan.

The rise of mobile technology, driven by greater smartphone adoption during the Covid-19 pandemic, has also led to accelerate­d growth of the digital economy, according to the report.

This was a harbinger for future venture deal-making in the region, the report’s authors said in a note, as consumers were becoming more used to tech-enabled platforms.

Between 2018 and 2023, software-related deals accounted for more than 40 per cent of private equity and venture capital deals in the region. Meanwhile, the share of annual deal value that involved business-to-consumer firms more than doubled from 2021 to 2023, from 16.8 per cent to 36.2 per cent.

Beyond India and Japan, Southeast Asia has also been one of the biggest economic beneficiar­ies of Washington’s efforts to “de-risk” from China.

Singapore has seen an influx of family offices, as many Chinese investors view it as a safe harbour for wealth preservati­on. The Singaporea­n government has been working on policies to stipulate that locally domiciled family offices invest in the city.

Still, Southeast Asia’s market remains complex, with fewer exit opportunit­ies for investors and a lack of growth-focused funds, according to PitchBook.

Policies and regulation­s can vary widely from one country to the next, and levels of developmen­t also present challenges.

The GDP of the region’s largest economy, Indonesia, is expected to reach US$1.5 trillion this year. Laos, the smallest economy, is at just US$14.1 billion.

Singapore alone generated nearly 6,000 private equity and venture capital deals from 2015 to 2023, the most in Southeast Asia. By contrast, the Philippine­s saw just 421 deals in those nine years.

In the same time period, just three companies generated 80 per cent of the value for venture capital-backed exits – US$55 billion out of US$70 billion. Privateequ­ity-backed exits have generated US$79.3 billion for investors since 2015.

Grab’s merger with a special purpose acquisitio­n company in 2021 – an arrangemen­t that allowed it to bypass the lengthy traditiona­l initial public offering process – was the largest ever such deal at US$32.8 billion.

Across all private equity and venture capital exits, four firms accounted for nearly 46 per cent of the total value in the region for those years.

Last year, just US$1.1 billion in venture-capital-backed exit value was generated in Southeast Asia, while private-equity-backed companies generated US$7 billion.

So while the tech ecosystem in the region is rapidly evolving, low returns could leave investors looking more towards India and Latin America, according to PitchBook analysts.

Another hurdle is the lack of growth-stage funds, as just 8.2 per cent of the venture capital funds closed since 2015 did so with more than US$250 million in capital commitment­s, leading to a general lack of late-stage capital across the region to support companies seeking growth.

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