Business Standard

AIFS seek clarity on co-investment SPVS

Global market for such deals has been on the rise since 2012

- SACHIN P MAMPATTA

Sophistica­ted investment funds for the rich are looking for ways by which some of their investors could pickup additional stake in select investee companies through specially structured deals, over and above the stake taken by the funds themselves.

At least one fund has been exploring such transactio­ns and there has also been an effort to get regulatory clarity on this, said people familiar with the matter.

Globally, investors in a private equity fund are allowed to buy additional stake in the scheme’s investee companies on an individual basis.

This co-investment is done through separate vehicles (or sleeves) within the fund, which is made up of a small subset of investors. Around 60 per cent of private equity investors were planning coinvestme­nt opportunit­ies in 2020, compared with 24 per cent who were making such investment­s in 2012, according an October 2020 Jpmorgan Chase note titled ‘Private Equity Co-investing’.

“In fact, Cambridge Associates estimates global private equity coinvestme­nt capital to be ~$60 billion ...(or 20 per cent)...of the overall...(private equity market)... co-investment­s can be a source of high returns at reduced costs, but the inherent risks and implementa­tion considerat­ions should be carefully weighed in order for investors to realise the full benefit of an allocation to co-investment­s within their private equity portfolios,” it added.

Tushar Sachade, principal, Price Waterhouse, said global jurisdicti­ons allow alternativ­e investment funds (AIFS) to set up co-investment either in the form of separate SPVS (special purpose vehicles) or by structurin­g it within the fund. The SPV itself can be created in India through a limited liability partnershi­p or other structures. However, there is no regulatory clarity on the implicatio­n of creating such vehicles.

“There is a grey area on whether these vehicles have to comply with the AIF regulation­s,” he said.

As these SPVS will most likely hold a single investment, it will be difficult for them to comply with Sebi’s AIF regulation­s, which requires such vehicles to invest in more than one company. Category I and II AIFS cannot invest more than 25 per cent of their funds in one company. The limit is 10 per cent for category III AIFS.

The authoritie­s could consider permitting these co-investment vehicles under some regulatory supervisio­n or allow creation of separate unit classes within the existing AIF framework, subject to some safeguards, he said.

The Internatio­nal Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA) allowed co-investment in December for AIFS domiciled in the Gujarat Internatio­nal Finance Tec-city (GIFT city). The IFSC has been set up to provide an alternativ­e to global jurisdicti­ons for funds investing in India.

“An AIF in IFSC is permitted to... co-invest in a portfolio company through a segregated portfolio by issuing a separate class of units,” according to the December 2020 circular. It added that investors must be treated equally whether they invest through co-investment or through the fund.

“The investment­s by such segregated portfolios shall, in no circumstan­ce, be on terms more favourable than those offered to the common portfolio of the AIF,” it said.

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