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  1. May 9, 2024 · The year 2023 continued the H2 2022 trend for Indian private equity and venture capital (PE-VC): Deal activity reduced ~35% from ~$62 billion in 2022 to ~$39 billion in 2023, returning to pre-Covid-19 activity levels. This overall slowdown was primarily driven by global factors, including weakened investor sentiment and persistent macroeconomic ...

  2. Sep 20, 2024 · Asset owners like Temasek, GIC, CPPIB, OTPP, and KIC are examples of large allocators who have set up dedicated Indian offices and have collectively invested $9 billion in Indian private equity deals in 2023. 21 As shown in Display 5, Indian funds may simply be too small for global allocators with the largest dedicated Indian GPs, Kedaara and ChrysCapital, managing funds at $1.5-2.0 billion ...

  3. Apr 19, 2023 · Indian PE-VC activity rode the momentum seen in H2 2021 till H1 2022, which saw dealmaking of close to $83 billion in 12 months. The exuberance at the start of the year, with record dealmaking of close to $40 billion in the first 6 months, was followed by decelerating deal activity closing at $21 billion. Different trends impacting distinct ...

    • Can Indian private equity survive a turbulence in 2022?1
    • Can Indian private equity survive a turbulence in 2022?2
    • Can Indian private equity survive a turbulence in 2022?3
    • Can Indian private equity survive a turbulence in 2022?4
    • Can Indian private equity survive a turbulence in 2022?5
    • Deals Landscape: A Year of Milestones
    • Sectors in Focus: It/Ites and Healthcare—Maturing Ecosystems
    • Fund Landscape: An Evolving Investor Ecosystem For Value Creation
    • Exits: Hitting The Peak
    • The ESG Opportunity: Moving from Compliance to Value
    PE-VC investments had a banner year in 2021 to reach an all-time peak of $69.8 billion, seeing a growth of 96% over the previous year’s deal values, excluding the mega-investments of Reliance Retai...
    Deal volumes nearly doubled to 2,000 from an average of 1,100 deals over 2019 and 2020, with the growth in volumes contributing nearly 96% to the growth in deal value seen in 2021, with minimal con...
    VC and growth equity zoomed 4x to reach nearly $40 billion—reaching a 55% share of overall PE investments.
    Buyouts also picked up further in 2021, crossing $16 billion in value, with a significant expansion in the size of cheques. However, the number of deals in 2021 was tempered compared to 2020.
    IT/ITES saw investments of $14.2 billion in 2021, growing by $11 billion over the previous year.
    PE investments in IT/ITES have grown from $2 billion to $12 billion in the past five years, and large deal volumes are increasing.
    In 2021, the sector saw five deals greater than $1 billion in a tremendous increase from the last two years that saw a single billion-dollar deal.
    The sector’s attractiveness has picked up due to post-Covid shifts in business operations, the need for business continuity amidst uncertainties, and a pivot to digitally enabled models focused on...
    Top 10 funds have invested close to $43 billion in India in the last three years. The largest deals from these investments are in IT/ITES and telecom (largely in Jio Platforms and Airtel).
    Major LPs are getting more active and co-investing with GPs on large assets. 2021 saw 2x activity from LPs compared to their average deal activity across 2018–2020.
    The increase in LP participation in deals bodes well for PE in India as it unlocks access to larger deals with a shared risk for investors and allows a win-win for both GPs and LPs.
    The quantum of buyouts has been picking up, with a 5x growth in the last five years to reach $16 billion. In 2021, 46% of all PE deals were buyouts, compared to 33% in 2016. The average buyout deal...
    Exits were at an all-time high in 2021, picking up rapidly from the past year’s lull across all routes of exit. 2021 saw more than $36 billion in exits, quadrupling the value over 2020’s approximat...
    Exits of >$100 million nearly tripled in volumes and grew by 69% in size, as all sectors witnessed an acceleration in exits and exit value.
    Strategic sale continues to be the most dominant route of exit, with almost 50% of all exits over the last few years. Secondary sale and strategic sale are becoming the most preferred exit routes,...
    The size of exits grew significantly faster than the exit volumes, indicating higher valuations. Public markets are also showing an appetite for large exits, with an average size of exit reaching $...
    Funds increasingly view ESG criteria as a core consideration in investment decisions. The global acceleration toward ESG adoption has reached Indian shores, as many India-focused funds are increasi...
    Research by Bain revealed that Indian funds expect ESG considerations over their PE AUM assets under consideration to grow to 90% over five years from now, up from only 39% five years ago, indicati...
    ESG is becoming increasingly relevant as it is used for mitigating future risks to portfolios, and LPs are advocating it as important criteria in fund strategy and value-creation plans.
    At 66%, India-focused funds view risk mitigation as a key driver for ESG adoption compared to peers in APAC, who view compliance as a more significant driver at 62%. India’s push on compliance as a...
  4. The recent weakness in the Indian equity market appears more due to geopolitical tensions rather than worries over growth prospects. Long-term prospects for domestic equities remain promising A lack of clarity on fiscal policy is also adding to the volatility in local bond markets – as the Reserve Bank of India comes to terms with the lower growth, higher inflation backdrop

  5. Sep 10, 2024 · Grant Thornton Bharat coined this term in 2010, representing the emergence of private equity in the Indian corporate landscape, which in our opinion has aligned with the other three wheels, providing much needed growth capital for India Inc.’s new entrepreneurs to scale up holistically. Grant Thornton Bharat presents expert analysis on India ...

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  7. India has maintained a balanced geopolitical stance and is likely to profit from global trade diversification efforts by leading economies. We expect gross domestic product (GDP) growth to be close to 7% for the 2022-2023 fiscal year, then at least 6% in the following two fiscal years. This is backed by strong consumption and continued taxpayer ...

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