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Silicon
Valley-based VC firms are taking the lead to enter India,
a market that offers the best of the three key location-based
advantages. At last count, 44 US-based VCs had announced
plans to set up India-based funds of an average fund
size of $100 million, says Bundeep Singh Rangar,
chairman of the UK-based India-focused cross-border
advisory firm, IndusView.
 Few
things excite venture capitalists more than the possibility
of investing at a low price in a company with global
disruptive potential that offer an exponential return.
Internet start-ups offer among the best potential for
high-growth, capital efficient and exit-able investments.
As India''s internet user base of 50 million grows at
25 per cent each year, more internet companies are being
formed to target the online market. Consequently, more
funds are being set up to invest in such companies.
Not
surprisingly, Silicon Valley based VC firms are taking
the lead. At last count, 44 US-based VCs had announced
plans to set up India-based funds of an average fund
size of $100 million. If successful, that would imply
about $4.4 billion in new investment capital would be
available for venture investments in India over the
next five to six years. That''s more than twice the $2.03
billion total in venture capital and private equity
investments in India in 2005 and comparable to the investments
in 2006 at $7.8 billion.
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Name
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Profile
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Focus
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Fund
Size ($ million)
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Clearstone
Venture Partners
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An
early stage venture capital firm with offices
in Santa Monica, CA, Menlo Park, CA, and Mumbai,
India
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To
invest between $2 million and $5 million in early-stage
companies
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200.00
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Matrix
Partners
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A
multi-stage fund having offices in Boston &
Silicon Valley, U.S. and Mumbai, India
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The
technology sectors such as outsourcing, Internet,
mobile services, and IP-based products
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150.00
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Helion
Venture Partners
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A
stage independent, India-focused venture fund
having offices in Port Luis, Mauritius and Bangalore
& Gurgaon, India
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High
growth technology businesses
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140.00
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BTS
India Private Equity Fund
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India
focused fund of BTS Investment Advisors, a Switzerland
and India based private equity advisor
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Invest
between $1 million and $5 million in medium-size
enterprises looking for capital expansion
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80.00
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SBI
Capital Markets Limited and Softbank Investment
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SBI
Capital Markets Limited is the investment banking
subsidiary of State Bank of India and Softbank
Investment is the venture capital arm of Japan''s
SBI Holdings Inc.
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Investments
will range between $5 million and $10 million,
targeting BPO services, online businesses, and
technology-enabled design and manufacturing
among other areas
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100.00
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Taking
Indian Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) into consideration,
that would be equal to $22 billion worth of investment
capital in the U.S.
Recently,
Silicon Valley-based Venture Capital fund Sequoia Capital
merged its India operations with VC Fund WestBridge
Capital Partners based in Bangalore, capital city of
the south Indian state of Karnataka. WestBridge has
been one of the most active VC funds in India. The new
merged entity is now called Sequoia Capital India.
Sequoia
joins other Silicon Valley funds such as Kleiner Perkins,
Norwest Venture Partners, Matrix Partners, Benchmark
Capital, Draper Fisher Jurvetson, and Greylock Partners
that have expanded their presence in India recently.
After
a lull between 2000 and 2004, early stage companies
received venture capital investments worth $482 million
across 52 deals in 2005. Last year, investors took greater
risks by investing money in very early stage companies.
In 2006, that resulted in VCs investing 70 per cent
in sectors such as online classifieds and travel, mobile
and mobile value-added services companies, gaming and
telecoms.
IT
and ITeS
It is difficult to ignore a market that offers the best
of the three key location-based advantages: a skilled
workforce, lower costs and growing domestic market.
That probably explains the big investment announcements
that have been doing the rounds by some of the industry
captains.
Leading
the pack is the world''s largest IT services company,
International Business Machines, Inc., (IBM). In June
last year, the company announced a long-term strategy
to align with India involving a total investment of
$6 billion. This is the largest investment by a multinational
operating in India. IBM''s Chief Executive Officer Sam
Palmisano had said the money will be used to build service
delivery centres in Bangalore and create a telecommunications
and research centre for clients.
This
investment is three times the $2 billion it has already
invested in the country. Since then, IBM''s headcount
in the country has swollen to 53,000 from about 40,000.
This is the largest IBM workforce outside the U.S. Meanwhile,
other notable blue chip companies are following suit.
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Company
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Profile
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Plans
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Investment
($ billion)
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SAP
AG
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Largest
European software-maker headquartered in Walldorf,
Germany
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Research
and development (R&D) facilities and double
its India headcount over 5 year period
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1.00
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General
Electric Company
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Worlds
second-biggest company by market value, headquartered
in Fairfield, Connecticut, USA
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Infrastructure
and healthcare projects
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0.25
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Microsoft
Corp.
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Worlds
largest software maker, headquartered in Redmond,
Washington, United States
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IT
literacy, creating local language computing solutions
and making it easier for people in rural communities
to access new technologies. Set up offices in
33 Indian cities and add 700 retail outlets
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1.70
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EMC
Corp.
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Worlds
biggest maker of storage computers and software,
headquartered in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, USA
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Growing
the Indian market for information management,
expanding the companys sales and marketing network,
and boosting its research and development activities
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0.50
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SemIndia
and Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD)
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Hyderabad
based SemIndia is a consortium of non-resident
IT professionals
AMD, headquartered in Hopkinton, Massachusetts,
USA, is the worlds second largest chip-maker
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Chip
manufacturing.
SemIndia will finance the investment, which covers
manufacturing, business development, and licensing
the technology from AMD
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3.00
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Private
equity firms have made lucrative returns from early
bets on companies. The Business Process Outsourcing
(BPO) industry, which grew by 37 per cent to $6.3 billion
in FY06 and expected to touch $8 - 8.5 billion by the
end of FY07 has actually been a runaway success.
Warburg
Pincus, the largest private equity investor in India,
made 13 times its initial investment when India''s largest
independent Business Process Outsourcing firm WNS Ltd
listed its shares on the New York Stock Exchange on
July 26.
Warburg
bought a 65 per cent stake in WNS in May 2002 when the
then financially-strapped British Airways Plc, sold
a part of its founding shares for $40 million. That
stake was worth almost $523 million as the company topped
a billion dollars in market value.
Electronic
Data Systems Corp. (EDS), a business and technology
solutions provider based in Plano, Texas, acquired the
Indian business process outsourcing (BPO) company Mphasis
BFL Ltd. EDS had placed $380 million open offer for
a 52 per cent stake in MphasiS.
VC
fund Baring Private Equity Partners used the open offer
to exit completely from one of its most successful investments.
Baring sold 56.01 million shares aggregating to 34.73
per cent stake in the company for $252 million.
Venture
capital investment in India''s growing online market
is also picking up speed. The Internet user base in
the country, which is expected to reach 100 million
by 2010, from 70 million today, has resulted in renewed
venture capital interest in funding start-ups seeking
to tap online spending.
VC
investment in this sector is likely to be 10 times that
of last year. Silicon Valley VCs such as Kleiner Perkins
Caufield and Byers and Sequoia Capital and corporations
such as Yahoo Inc. led 70 per cent worth of financing
in the online travel and classifieds sites compared
with a total of $10 million invested in Indian Internet
companies in 2005.
Internet
users are mostly among India''s affluent and price sensitive
300 million middle class, who are able to spend on goods
ranging from computers to travel tickets. E-commerce
revenue is expected to double this year to more than
half a million dollars from $262 million last year.
This
underlines the growing importance of an India-strategy
in the overall business plans of global investors.
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