A ₹70 crore buyout deal shows new way for liquidity in India

Bloomberg Updated - May 17, 2024 at 12:34 PM.

The latest deal values the privately held NSE at between ₹1700 crore and ₹1800 crore

National Stock Exchange | Photo Credit: REUTERS

A new method for private equity funds to return profits to investors may gain traction in India. 

ChrysCapital Management Co. recently used a so-called continuation fund to raise ₹70 crore from investors to maintain its minority stake in National Stock Exchange of India Ltd. This relatively new portfolio management tool allows private equity managers to move assets around more easily, as a way to hold them for longer. 

ChrysCapital’s transaction, one of the largest on Asia’s secondary market, helps set the stage for private equity funds in India to have another option for their investment stakes, Kunal Shroff, managing partner at the India-focused firm, said in an interview.

A firm can raise a continuation fund to move an asset or multiple assets from prior funds and allow investors in the original funds to either roll over their commitments into the new vehicle and sometimes add new capital, or to cash out and take liquidity.

The success of this continuation fund is “a positive signal to investors that India can get you liquidity, not just from block trades of a billion dollars that some of our peers have done or through sales to other PE funds or strategies,” said Shroff, who’s been at the firm since 1999.

Single or multi-asset continuation funds have gained more traction in the US and Europe. They made up 76 per cent of the private equity deal flow globally last year, according to a report by Evercore Inc. These so-called sponsor-led transactions accounted for less than half of the ₹11,400 crore in secondary market deal volumes, the report said. 

These transactions are still rare in Asia. ChrysCapital’s fundraise to hang on to its 4 per cent stake in NSE was more than double its original target, Shroff said. It also rolled over all its share of profits, or carried interest, on the deal into the new fund, reflecting its “skin in the game,” he added.

The latest deal values the privately held NSE at between ₹1,700 crore and ₹1,800 crore, but the firm still has a lot of runways for growth, Shroff said. Plans for taking the company public, a move that’s been in the works for years, are not yet firmed up, he said. 

HarbourVest Partners LLC, LGT Capital Partners AG and Pantheon Ventures Ltd came into the continuation fund as new investors, and UBS Group AG was an adviser to the deal. 

ChrysCapital has more than ₹500 crore of assets under management and has returned ₹650 crore to investors through more than 70 exits, according to its website. 

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

Published on May 15, 2024 10:18

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