Business Standard

PE funds ready war chest to help firms skip IBC route

- SURAJEET DAS GUPTA

Private equity (PE) funds estimate that in the next 18-24 months, Indian conglomera­tes will require over $100 billion in equity infusion because they are already reeling from debt, which is set to become nonperform­ing loans.

They are scouting around to sell their non-core businesses so that they can avoid turning to the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC). PE funds also believe that even if banks write off more than half of the $150 billion non-performing loans currently on their books, someone will need to replace the debt with equity to bring the companies back in the black.

That money, they say, will come in a big way from PE funds which are building their war chests to grab a part of this big opportunit­y. In the last two years, PE funds have poured in over $60 billion in India, but the new opportunit­y is over double the size of what they have invested.

Reflecting the mood of the industry, Amit Chandra, chairman of Bain Capital, one of the leading funds, said: “A lot of promoters are deleveragi­ng due to the significan­t tightening of lending norms for mutual funds, banks, and a major liquidity squeeze. In this context, private equity and strategic investors have a major role to play in bringing in long-term capital.”

Chandra argues that, as strategic investors move more slowly, have home market compulsion­s, and strategic priorities, PE funds could have a ‘big edge in many situations’.

That is clearly reflected in the coming of age of private equity business in the country. In late 2000, the few PE players who managed only to get small minority stakes in Indian companies as promoters were not ready to have them play a greater role than that of mere financiers.

Between 2005 and 2014, global PE funds were chary about betting too much money on India, especially as getting exits based on a reasonable return on investment was becoming a problem.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India