Business Standard

Anil Agarwal seeks $5 bn for turnaround fund

Targets companies being sold off by the Indian government

- NISHANT KUMAR & DINESH NAIR 29 September

Commoditie­s tycoon Anil Agarwal ( pictured) is seeking at least $5 billion for a fund targeting firms being sold off by the Indian government, according to people familiar with the matter, marking a return to the strategy that made him wealthy.

Agarwal is targeting an initial close of $1 billion or more for the proposed India Direct Investment fund, the people said, asking not to be identified because the plans are private. He is already scouting for targets and could spend nearly $10 billion on the first few acquisitio­ns, one of the people said.

He is working with Londonbase­d Centricus Asset Management on the fund, which will have a 10-year life span and use a private equity-type strategy, according to another person. He plans to buy companies over a five-year period and then boost their profitabil­ity before seeking an exit, the person said.

Agarwal, the founder of Vedanta Resources, is raising capital from internatio­nal investors to buy stakes in government firms being sold under India’s ~2.1 trillion ($28 billion) divestment programme, Bloomberg News reported this month. The fund will also target companies being restructur­ed under the country’s bankruptcy rules. A representa­tive for Centricus declined to comment, while a spokespers­on for Vedanta didn’t respond to emailed queries.

Agarwal has a net worth of $2.4 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index. The former metals trader built his business through a series of ambitious acquisitio­ns over the past few decades, including a 2001 deal to take control of government-owned Bharat Aluminium in one of the first tests of India’s efforts to offload state holdings.

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