The National - News

INVESTCORP EXPECTS ‘SHALLOW RECESSION’ IN US AND EU

▶ Middle East and Asia will continue to expand, says its co-chief executive

- FAREED RAHMAN

The US, the world’s largest economy, and Europe are headed for a shallow recession while the Middle East and the rest of Asia will continue to expand, a top executive at Bahrain-based alternativ­e asset manager Investcorp has said.

“The Western Hemisphere, US and Europe, we can certainly anticipate an economic growth slowdown, maybe a shallow recession, during the second half of 2023, maybe even into early 2024 resulting from tightening of monetary policy and high inflation,” Rishi Kapoor, co-chief executive of Investcorp told The National.

However, economies in the Middle East as well as China, the world’s second-largest economy, India and South-East Asian countries will continue to grow amid a “pretty robust environmen­t”, Mr Kapoor said.

“The Middle East and Asia, a very different narrative. Those economies are booming. They don’t have as acute an inflation problem as the interest rate issue.”

Last month, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said advanced economies would drag down the global economy this year, with growth expected to fall to 1.3 per cent before rebounding to 1.4 per cent in 2024, after expanding 2.7 per cent in 2022.

The US, the biggest of the group, is forecast to expand by 1.6 per cent in 2023, instead of 1.4 per cent as previously projected and lower than the 2.1 per cent growth recorded last year, according to the IMF.

Its economy is projected to expand 1.1 per cent in 2024.

The US is continuing to raise interest rates to tame inflation, which hit a peak of 9.1 per cent in June last year.

In contrast, emerging market and developing economies are expected to expand 3.9 per cent this year, the IMF said.

China, which reopened its economy in January after lifting zero-Covid restrictio­ns, is projected to grow at 5.2 per cent, while India is expected to outpace the world’s economies with a 5.9 per cent growth in 2023, the multilater­al lender said.

According to the IMF, real gross domestic product growth in the Middle East and Central Asia is forecast at 2.9 per cent this year following a 5.3 per cent expansion in 2022. The growth is set to reach 3.5 per cent next year.

Saudi Arabia, the largest Arab economy, is forecast to expand 3.1 per cent this year and the next following an 8.7 per cent expansion in 2022, it added.

Investcorp, which counts Mubadala Investment Company as its biggest shareholde­r, will continue to boost investment­s in India as economic growth picks up.

Mr Kapoor believes that “basic drivers” for long-term growth such as young demographi­cs, political stability and regulatory structure are robust in markets like India, SouthEast Asia and China.

The company manages about $1 billion worth of assets in Asia’s third-largest economy and aims to reach $5 billion in the next three to five years with investment­s across six core sectors: health care, logistics, social infrastruc­ture, IT and IT services, consumer tech and financial services.

The Indian economy is “growing and is one of the fastest-growing large economies in the world and it is likely to continue to grow. The regulatory and political landscape has become much more stable and dependable over the last several years, including the legal institutio­nal architectu­re”, Mr Kapoor said.

“The most attractive bit about India today is the demographi­c … it is a young population that is quite educated and, most importantl­y, it is digitally native.”

This allows businesses to leverage technology to scale up rapidly in an organised manner, given the size of the population, he said.

The company aims to finance new deals through a $400 million India-focused fund and a new fund that it plans to launch in the future.

Investcorp has completed 15 deals in India in the past four years. Last year, it led an investment totalling 5.45 billion Indian rupees ($66.3 million) in Global Dental Services, Asia’s largest dental chain and one of the top 15 dental services organisati­ons globally.

Its other investment­s in India include V-Ensure, NDR Warehousin­g, Intergrow Brands, Freshtohom­e, Bewakoof.com, Zolo and Unilog.

The company also aims to boost its assets in the US to about $50 billion in the next five years from about $23 billion currently.

Last month, Investcorp acquired a majority stake in Shearer Supply, a distributo­r of heating, ventilatio­n and air-conditioni­ng equipment for residentia­l and commercial properties in the US.

“The company will continue to invest in private equity, real estate and credit in the US,” said Mr Kapoor. “We announced the $1.2 billion fund that we just closed, that’s the primary vehicle for our private equity business and similarly we have funds for real estate and for our credit business.”

The company closed its inaugural North American Private Equity Fund I in March with the participat­ion of blue-chip institutio­nal investors such as pension plans, family offices, private wealth funds and an insurance company.

It is targeting family and founder-owned businesses across six sub-sectors as part of its investment strategy. These are: technology-enabled, knowledge and profession­al, data and informatio­n, supply chain, industry and consumer services.

“From an asset class perspectiv­e, private credit is very attractive right now because the demand for credit is high and interest rates are high,” said Mr Kapoor.

“The return that we are getting is very attractive, we are able to get low double-digit return on credit, which in the last 20 years, we haven’t seen.”

Last year, Investcorp agreed to buy US-based Marble Point Credit Management, a specialist asset manager focused on managing CLOs (collateral­ised loan obligation) and portfolios of broadly syndicated leveraged loans.

In real estate, it continues to see opportunit­ies in logistics warehouses, as well as in multifamil­y and student housing assets amid a supply shortage.

In private equity “we see continued opportunit­y in three areas, specifical­ly white-collar business services, including service providers that aid the journey towards digitalisa­tion and specialist consulting; blue-collar business services that are relatively immune to the cycle, and more recession-resilient sectors, such as essential maintenanc­e and repair infrastruc­ture”, said Mr Kapoor.

The company will look to invest in different asset classes in Japan, where it recently opened an office.

Japan is one of “the top five global economies … somewhat underpenet­rated when it comes to asset classes such as private equity, private real estate, private credit”, Mr Kapoor said.

Set up in 1982, Investcorp has grown to become one of the leading alternativ­e asset management companies in the region, with 14 offices in the US, Europe, the GCC and Asia. It oversees $50 billion in assets, including assets managed by third parties.

Those economies are booming. They don’t have as acute an inflation problem as the interest rate issue

RISHI KAPOOR

Co-chief executive of Investcorp

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 ?? EPA ?? The Gateway of India, Mumbai. Bahrain-based Investcorp plans to finance new deals in India through a $400 million fund
EPA The Gateway of India, Mumbai. Bahrain-based Investcorp plans to finance new deals in India through a $400 million fund

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