Business Standard

ICICI Venture to raise $1 billion via 3 new funds

- SURAJEET DAS GUPTA

ICICI Venture, one of the country’s first home-grown private equity (PE) funds, will raise around $1 billion through three funds.

These include a new start-up fund (an area which the company is re-entering after two decades) of $200-300 million, a new real estate fund of $300-400 million targeted at smart office spaces, and a follow-up of its existing PE fund which is close to getting fully invested and has a proposed size of about $300-400 million. The probable timeline for the fundraise is one to two years, depending on the overall market conditions.

On ICICI Venture’s strategy of raising new funds, Puneet Nanda, managing director and CEO, says : “We are not targeting which year — it could take one year or two. We are not impatient and many new ideas may also emerge.”

Nanda says that for the start-up fund, the company is virtually starting from scratch, as it has not done anything in this area for two decades. (ICICI Venture was the first company to invest in Sanjeev Bikhchanda­ni’s naukri.com) “So a lot of background work is being done on which areas to invest in and we are also talking to companies. It looks like it will be mid 2022,” he adds.

ICICI Venture is also looking at other opportunit­ies such as investing in companies which are eligible for the production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme in the manufactur­ing sector. It is also assessing the credit business, especially as banks are increasing­ly getting wary of providing loans to mid-sized and smaller companies.

For instance, one of the company’s investment­s this year has been in epack Durables, a non-listed, outsourced AC manufactur­ing company, which is the second largest in the country, and one which is already eligible for the PLI scheme.

Says Nanda: “The AC industry is doing well. And schemes like the PLI help in increasing revenues and improving bottom lines. We will surely look at more opportunit­ies in the PLI space”.

On their foray into the credit business, Nanda says: “We are seeing the evolution of a private credit market. Corporatio­ns are looking for credit and we will carefully assess this market.”

The company points out that historical­ly, credit was given by banks and financial institutio­ns.

However, thanks to various restrictio­ns, loans have become hard to come by as one goes down the credit curve.

ICICI Venture does, of course, have experience in this space through its joint venture with Apollo (the fund is fully invested now) which had the option of providing debt.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: AJAY MOHANTY

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