The Sun (Malaysia)

Asia private equity squeezed for funds

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HONG KONG: Private equity fundraisin­g in Asia has dropped to its lowest since the aftermath of the global financial crisis, as investors are wary to lend capital amid the coronaviru­s outbreak that has restricted travel and roiled markets and businesses.

A total of US$9 billion (RM38.8 billion) was raised by 35 Asia-focused funds from January to March, the worst start to the year since 2010, according to data from Preqin, which publishes informatio­n on private equity and venture capital investment.

The slowdown comes as the Covid-19 pandemic caused by the coronaviru­s has swept across the world, forcing government­s to lock down cities and suspend business activities.

Fundraisin­g may continue to take a hit as fund managers weather the impact of the pandemic on their portfolio companies while investors take a step back to assess their overall capital allocation.

“This is a challenge for everyone, even for the big guys. For emerging fund managers, it can be harder to raise funds,” said Mingchen Xia, co-head of Asia investment­s at Hamilton Lane.

World stocks have lost US$15 trillion in value as countries scrambled to contain the virus spread and stabilise economies.

Fund investors, typically sovereign funds, pension funds and family offices, usually travel to Asia in the spring for meetings with their existing fund managers and to see potential new funds. But with heavy restrictio­ns on travel and ongoing market volatility, they are becoming more cautious where and how to deploy their capital. – Reuters

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