India did not figure in investors' definition of Asia. Not anymore.
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In March, when the international private equity firm Warburg Pincus sold a $560 million stake in Bharti Tele-Ventures, India's largest publicly traded mobile telephony company, it created a sensation both in that country and among private-equity investors around the world. The transaction, on the Bombay Stock Exchange, was the largest block trade ever on the Indian market. It was also consummated in a breathtaking 28 minutes, prompting stock market observers in India to remark on the unexpected depth and maturity of their equity markets.
Private equity investors marveled at the profitability of the investment - in a market that was in its infancy barely a decade ago. Money from U.S. private equity investors was going to Asia back then, but it was to destinations such as Indonesia and Thailand. India did not figure in most investors' definitions of "Asia" - or at least not in any major way. The March transaction was the largest of a series of retrenchments, over several months, that saw Warburg reduce its 18.5% stake in Bharti to about 6 percent. Warburg's vote of confidence in India is not universally shared. Globetrotting financial commentator Jim Rogers has written off the country as a haven for slow-moving bureaucrats who are insensitive to the needs of business. He has predicted a gloomy future for India not only as an economy but also as a country - predicting its breakup into smaller nation states, torn apart by ethnic and religious strife. But Rogers drove through India and sought out its most difficult political and economic terrain. Warburg has an office there. Rogers was dejected by the country's decaying roads and bridges. Warburg investors see investment opportunity in them. Rogers hated the rickety telephone landlines he encountered in India. Warburg investors, like millions of Indians who are simply bypassing the landlines and migrating to mobile telephony, fell in love with Bharti.
"There may be debate about the pace of reform, but not about its direction. Indian businessmen today very rarely point to government as an obstacle," Pathak says. As for that vaunted Indian bureaucracy, he mentions that Warburg repatriated its profits in 48 hours. It's easy to take money out of India, perhaps even easier than bringing it in, he jests. What has Warburg discovered in India during the last decade? Pathak lists the developments that are exciting investors like him: Foreign institutional investment has boomed (more than $12 billion in 2003-04) as curbs on foreign investment in Indian industries have been relaxed; there is a virtually open skies approach to investment from the United States; and gross domestic product has grown at rates between 6.5 percent and 8 percent in recent years. The volatility of the Indian rupee has been curbed and inflation has declined. "There are smart people running that economy," Pathak says. Declining inflation has meant lower interest rates, and in turn has goosed the equity markets. Since October 2004, the Bombay Stock Exchange's Sensitive Index, or Sensex, of 30 blue chip stocks has added 2,500 points, to cross 8,000. "We made a big bet on interest rates coming down, and it was the right bet to make," Pathak says. He even compares India favorably with parts of Europe in one surprising aspect: "Labor issues are far more difficult in France than in India," he says. High Confidence There's a swagger in the step of India's business, and the country's government is showing signs it has caught the contagion, Kaye says. According to a 2003 Goldman Sachs report, "India's economy could be larger than all but the U.S. and China in 30 years." It's a prediction that doesn't appear far-fetched to Kaye and Pathak. As Warburg's substantial divestment from Bharti shows, however, the investment firm has not lost its head over India. "Bharti has reached the scale and quality level that ensures it will have a long and bright future," Kaye says. But that very milestone means it is "less appropriate from a risk-reward perspective." That's investor-speak for "there's not enough upside left" in the company. Warburg's other notable holdings in India include Rediff Communication, the country's largest consumer web portal; Gujarat Ambuja Cement; Sintex Industries, an industrial plastic-goods manufacturer with a 60 percent share of the market for water-storage tanks; Kotak Mahindra, a financial services conglomerate; Nicholas Piramal India, a major pharmaceutical company, and WNS Global Services, a business process outsourcing company. As the list shows, Warburg's bets in India are hardly reckless. The firm generally sticks to the tried, true, big and stock-market listed. That is rarely a winning strategy for a private equity investor in the United States, but can be in India, where the pent-up demands of a billion people leave plenty of room to grow for even the largest conglomerates. So in India, the investment firm is not spending much time seeking out early-stage companies or funky technology. In fact a couple of its forays into tech were jettisoned. They involved minor investments, under $2 million each, Pathak says. But success has brought competition. Several significant names in the U.S. private equity world are now operating in India, among them Intel Capital, Oak Hill Capital Management, the Carlyle Group, Citigroup Venture Capital International, General Atlantic Partners, CSFB Private Equity, and the California Public Employees Retirement System, or CalPERS. Most of them have invested only in the double digits so far - Citigroup has invested as little as $23 million. But "we need to keep on our toes," Pathak says. Warburg is now looking to participate in India's raging real estate market, he adds. "Last year we were not." "Being smart and having a lot of money is not a differentiator anymore," Kaye says. So Warburg is working assiduously to become a recognizable brand in India. Reprinted from Knowledge@Wharton (http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu) (c) 2005 Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. |
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