Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

India a priority for $2bn TPG Fund

TPG’s Rise raises largest private impact investment fund

- Shrija Agarwal and Swaraj Singh Dhanjal shrija.a@livemint.com

MUMBAI: The Rise Fund, founded by TPG Growth founder and managing partner Bill McGlashan, U2 lead singer and activist Bono, and Jeff Skoll, an entreprene­ur and film producer, has closed the largest impact investment fund raised so far with a total corpus of $2 billion.

Managed by TPG Growth, The Rise Fund is a global fund committed to achieving measurable, positive social and environmen­tal outcomes alongside competitiv­e financial returns, which is what impact investing is all about. TPG Growth manages more than $8.3 billion of assets.

“We have raised $2 billion of capital and this is the largest private investment impact fund ever raised. It has been raised from some of the most important financial institutio­ns in the world, a majority of which have never invested in impact before,” said McGlashan, in a telephone interview with Mint.

The Rise Fund invests in education, energy, food and agricultur­e, financial services, growth infrastruc­ture, health care, and technology companies. India is a priority investment destinatio­n for the Rise Fund.

Already, out of a total of five investment­s made by the fund, two are in India. In May, the fund invested $50 million in Hyderabad-based Dodla Dairy. The fund has also partnered with impact investor Elevar Equity and will work closely with the latter’s team in India.

“India is our priority; 400 million of the world’s unbanked people live in India. In health care 65% of the population does not have access to sanitation; India has 65 million diabetics; farmers in India grow 46% less rice per acre than their counterpar­ts in China; literacy lags by 20% and teacher absenteeis­m rate can be as high as 40%. Meanwhile you have some of the most extraordin­ary talent in the world; 70% of the population now has access to mobile connection and smartphone adoption will increase 400% over the next five years,” said McGlashan, listing all the things that made India attractive.

While many of the existing limited partners (LPs) of TPG Growth participat­ed in the Rise Fund, the new fund also saw several new LPs, he added. Investors in private equity funds are called limited partners.

LPs who participat­ed in the fund include Sweden’s pension fund AP2, University of California and several ultra high networth clients of Swiss bank UBS Group AG.

Historical­ly, the managers of commercial capital have avoided investing in impact funds due to a perception that this involves compromisi­ng on returns, McGlashan said. “Investors with a fiduciary responsibi­lity ultimately need to prioritise financial returns. So the key here was that all of these institutio­ns understood that our priority was financial returns and collinear impact returns. These are dual priorities and there is no conflict between them. The success of the businesses we are funding is ultimately the key to delivering impact and obviously the key to delivering returns,” he said.

According to McGlashan, the investors were also attracted to invest in the fund because of the rigorous impact measuremen­t metrics developed by TPG.

In a recent report on the state of impact investment in the country, McKinsey & Co. said impact investing in India has the potential to grow from $1 billion in 2015 to $6-8 billion by 2025.

Realsing the difference in the mindset required for commercial PE investment­s and impact investment­s, TPG has built a new team for The Rise Fund.

 ?? AFP/FILE ?? TPG Growth founder Bill McGlashan: Of the five investment­s made by the fund so far, two are in India
AFP/FILE TPG Growth founder Bill McGlashan: Of the five investment­s made by the fund so far, two are in India

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