But that should be seen in the context of last year being a milestone for the PE business: the fresh investments which flowed in were the highest ever in the past 10 years. In 2016, the total investment from PE funds was only $16.4 billion. And more importantly, while the number of deals fell, the size of the average deal was much bigger (see chart).
This was partly because control deals this year were increasingly attracting a lot of PE funds. The reason, according to PE players, is that Indian entrepreneurs facing the challenge of banking loans drying up, and the possibility of becoming a stressed asset, were much more willing to give up management control and remain just a shareholder. Also the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) threw open new opportunities for the acquisition of majority control with many stressed assets on the block.
In 2017, according to data from VCC Edge, the total value of control deals went up by 23 per cent from $4.8 billion in 2017 to $5.9 billion this year, even though the number of deals shrank.
To give another perspective based on data from leading private equity players, last year PE funds in five control deals (of over $100 million) invested $710 million. However, in 2018 global investment firm KKR on its own forked out over $1.2 billion to acquire majority stakes in Analjit Singh’s health care assets (in Max India) as well a 60 per cent control in Chennai-based Ramky Enviro Engineers.
And they were not the only ones. AION Partners, which tied up with JSW, grabbed 74.3 per cent in stressed asset Monett Ispat for Rs 24 billion while Advent International bought a majority stake in PET manufacturer Manjushree Technopak.