Private equity, VC investments hit record high of USD 48 bn in 2019: Report
The report titled 'PE/VC Agenda: India Trend Book 2020' said that this is the third consecutive year that the private equity and venture capital sector has outperformed.
"In terms of value, PE/VC investments increased by 28 per cent as compared to 2018, while the deal volume increased by 35 per cent.
"The growth was primarily driven by a significant increase in investments in infrastructure sector, which grew over three times compared to 2018," it said.
The report was released on Monday at the Indian Private Equity and Venture Capital Association (IVCA) conclave 2020.
According to a report, while growth in traditional PE/VC investments dipped marginally in 2019, the growth in overall PE/VC investments was driven by investments in the infrastructure asset class.
"Investments in infrastructure sector accounted for 30 per cent of PE/VC investments by value compared to 12 per cent in 2018," it said.
The report pointed out that largest deals in 2019 were also in the infrastructure sector including Brookfield's USD 3.7 billion buyout of Reliance Jio's tower assets and USD 1.9 billion investment in Reliance Industries East-West pipeline.
The largest deal in traditional PE/VC asset class was Alibaba and Softbank's USD 1 billion investment in Paytm, it said.
The EY report said largest fund raise during the year saw government sponsor a USD 1.5 billion fund for providing last-mile funding to real estate developers for completion of stalled housing projects followed by Edelweiss Alternative Asset Advisors and Kotak Special Situations Fund raising USD 1.3 billion and USD 1 billion respectively to invest in stressed assets.
As per the report, PE/VC investments in infrastructure space were at USD 14.5 billion in 2019, which were higher than the cumulative PE/VC infrastructure investments received in the previous seven years.
Almost 49 per cent of PE/VC investments in infrastructure in 2019 have been through the InvIT structure, it said.
For the first time in India, the report pointed out that buyouts have emerged as the largest PE/ VC investments deal type, overtaking the growth capital deals and accounting for 34 per cent of all PE/VC investments by value in 2019.
"When compared across deal types, buyouts have recorded the largest increase of 56 per cent in terms of value(USD 16.2 billion in 2019 Vs USD 10.4 billion in 2018)," it said.
In the past two years, buyouts clocked USD 26.7 billion in deal value, which is more than the value of buyouts in the preceding 12 years combined, the report pointed out.
The numbers have also been the highest ever in 2019 with 58 deals, it added.
Over the past five years, sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) and pension funds have directly invested around USD 32.8 billion in India accounting for 22 per cent of the dollar value of investments made during this period.
According to the report, there has been a progressive increase in the share of large deals (value greater than USD 100 million) in the total PE/VC investments in India and now account for more than two-thirds of all investments by value.
"In 2019, there were 111 deals of value greater than USD 100 million that aggregate to USD 35.2 billion and accounted for 73 per cent of total PE/VC investments made in 2019.
"This is the highest ever number of large deals in a year and 37 per cent higher than the previous high recorded last year," it said.
While the overall investments in start-ups increased by 22 per cent (USD 7.9 billion in 2019 Vs USD 6.5 billion in 2018) in terms of value, the number of deals increased by 61 per cent by 61 per cent (610 deals in 2019 Vs 378 deals in 2018).
Notwithstanding recent headwinds faced by the Non-banking Financial Company (NBFC) sector, in 2019 at USD 9.1 billion, PE/VC investments in financial sector was up by 20 per cent compared to last year, the report said.
Elaborating further, the report said other sectors that recorded increase in investment are technology (USD 3.9 billion across 147 deals in 2019 Vs USD 3.8 billion across 125 deals in 2018), life sciences (USD 2.5 billion across 69 deals in 2019 Vs USD 1.7 billion across 60 deals in 2018) and food and agriculture (USD 881 million across 83 deals in 2019 against USD 647 million 42 deals in 2018.
Principal economic advisor in the Ministry of Finance, Sanjeev Sanyal, has said that although business culture has genuinely improved in the last few years, enforcement of contract is the single biggest constraint now to doing business in India.
Sanyal also stressed on the need to look at administrative reforms by the government.
"In 1991, we were forced to became a market economy because of crisis. We did not do it because we changed our mind... Bureaucrats talks about market failures instead of state failures. Free markets should be allowed to function in an appropriate way," he said.
National Investment and Infrastructure Fund (NIIF) CEO Sujoy Bose said the fund wants to support small scale companies through NIIF.
"We will be soon starting large scale PE(Private Equity) fund to support small companies," he said.
Bose said PEs are now willing to invest in challenging companies in challenging times.
He also talked about the need for more women fund managers in India.
"The PE/VC industry can benefit from the tremendous business acumen and strengths that must create a playing field where we attract more women into the industry,"Bose said
NIIF is India's maidan Rs 40,000 crore sovereign wealth fund.
Sanjay Nayar KKR said role of corporate governance is becoming supremely important.
IVCA chairman Padmanabh Sinha said that PE& VC clearly have becomes anchors of the economy and playing a structural role in economy. BKS MKJ