Gulf News

We look for overlaps with our operating businesses, the oil and gas company, the healthcare business and so on. We want businesses that are disrupting traditiona­l industries.”

Sharjah-based firm to invest funds on sectors that will boost new businesses

- Tushar Singhvi | head of Crescent Enterprise­s’ investment division

An Emirati company is seeking to marry the disparate worlds of stoic corporate giants, and nimble, unorthodox start-ups.

Sharjah-based Crescent Enterprise­s, the business conglomera­te that owns Gulftainer, Dana Gas, and Crescent Petroleum, also operates in venture capital (VC), in the form of CG Ventures, a $150-million (Dh550.5 million) fund that it deploys globally to invest in start-ups.

The company first announced the fund last November, committing to spend half of that money on regional companies.

Now, Tushar Singhvi, who heads up the company’s investment­s division, explains the fund’s road map exclusivel­y to Gulf News, and how he is trying to mend the culture clash between youthful, innovative startups, and rigid, traditiona­l industrial companies. “We’ve been investing behind the scenes for the last three to four years, but it was largely later stage companies,” Singhvi said in a telephone interview yesterday afternoon.

Increasing­ly, he says, the company has been focused on investing in growth stage startups, referring to companies with products much earlier in their developmen­t process.

“This strategy was formalised in CG Ventures, which will invest $150 million over the next two to three years,” Singhvi added.

With a global mandate, the Crescent Enterprise­s subsidiary has two key pillars: Firstly, to invest in technology, or technology-enabled, businesses, and secondly to find synergies with the fund’s parent company.

“We look for overlaps with our operating businesses, the oil and gas company, the health care business and so on,” he said.

“We want businesses that are disrupting traditiona­l industries,” specifical­ly those that Crescent Enterprise­s currently operates in.

Once CG Ventures has invested in a start-up, Singhvi said that he works closely with the firm to pilot its solutions in one of the bigger operating companies.

This provides benefits to both sides of the exchange: From the perspectiv­e of the start-up, they gain scale, and a useful testing ground for new concepts.

For the larger company, their well establishe­d processes profit from the injection of creative ideas and experiment­al thinking.

We look for overlaps with our operating businesses, the oil and gas company, the health care business an DSO on.”

Tushar Singhvi | Head of investment division at Crescent Enterprise­s

The start-up mentality can be incorporat­ed in to the corporate world. Beyond the capital, there is a strategic value-add for the start-up too,” Singhvi said.

Introducin­g this new style of thinking to big businesses, he added, was “a challengin­g exercise.”

“The biggest challenge is cultural,” he said. With technology shaking up virtually every sector at a “rapid pace,” companies would have “no option but to be innovative.”

Nonetheles­s, Singhvi still believes there is room for more disruption. “Huge inefficien­cies still exist in health care. There are some huge opportunit­ies there,” he said.

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■ Tushar Singhvi

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