The funds have invested about $2 billion this year in the country's non-bank financing sector, which is worth some $40 billion.
Business
Standard : Private equity funds are picking through the
rubble of India’s crisis-stricken shadow banking sector, even as
other investors balk.
The
funds have invested about $2 billion this year in the country’s
non-bank financing sector, which is worth some $40 billion. While
that’s not enough to staunch the 16-month long cash crunch
following the collapse of IL&FS Group, it is 50 per cent higher
than the average over the last four years and comes after a strong
2018, according to data from research firm Venture Intelligence.
Investing
in India’s shadow banks involves some serious risks. Slowing
economic growth could drag more financiers into default. Altico
Capital India Ltd., whose shareholders include Fiera Capital and
Varde Partners, missed debt payments in September. The head of KKR &
Co.’s lending business in India resigned last month amid rising
defaults in the sector.
There’s
also concern liquidations could spread after major shadow lender
Dewan Housing Finance Corp. was seized by authorities last week.
Apollo Capital and Cerberus are eyeing a stake in Dewan Housing, the
Economic Times reported, citing an unidentified person familiar with
the development.
Other
types of investors have gotten cold feet.
Mutual
funds, which have been an important source of funds, cut their
exposure to shadow bank bonds to the lowest in five years in October,
Securities and Exchange Board of India data show.
The
share of money from insurers as part of NBFCs’
total funding has also declined to the lowest in at least two years,
according to Reserve Bank of India data.
Shadow
banking is not a sector where anything you pick is good, said Skanda
Jayaraman, managing director for investment banking at Spark Capital
Advisors India, which last month advised Aptus Value Housing Finance
India Ltd. on an equity raise. Still, “it’s a great time for
private equity players to look at NBFCs as the valuations can be
attractive.”
NBFCs
focused on financing micro-, small- and medium-sized firms have seen
significant interest from private equity funds, according to Arpan
Sheth, a partner at Bain & Co.
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