In what promises to be
one of the most expensive addresses in Mumbai, any hope of striking
a real estate deal is by invitation only. The staggering 65-floor
luxury condo - to be the tallest building in the country - in
upmarket Worli has all the ingredients of the ultimate dream
house, the kind rapidly being bought up by the rich and famous
in Dubai.Such as your own personal pool with each apartment overlooking
the Arabian Sea; or a squash court in the Club House; or even
a Business Centre in the lobby for meetings when you couldn't
be bothered driving across town to the office. Oh, and as many
as six or seven parking slots with each apartment so that parking
isn't an issue the next time friends casually drop in for a
party.The bill for this 6,000 sq ft of luxury? Let's just say you'll
need to have Rs 15-20 crore (Rs 150-200 million) by way of spare
cash if you want to buy into one of Mumbai's most expensive
apartments. Also, for the record, this is no construction major
out to grab a slice of the inflationary real estate market.
Instead, the project has been conceived and funded by a private
equity fund making an ambitious foray into the realty business.In the first development of its kind, ICICI Venture Funds Management
has tied up with a local developer to invest Rs 250 crore {Rs
2.5 billion (including the cost of acquiring the Glaxo office
land on which the residential tower is to come up)} to create
this upmarket property. And the cash for the project will come
from a $550 million realty fund, the largest in this sector,
which the company has just floated with the intention of investing
in the real estate market.Already, ICICI is positioning itself as a significant player
in the sector. Its target? To invest half the cash in the fund
by the end of the year. A few weeks ago the company bid successfully
with a local developer for a six-acre estate in Hyderabad's
posh Jubilee Hill area for a whopping Rs 335 crore (Rs 3.35
billion). It has tied up with another builder to develop a township
on 250 acres of land in Hinjewadi IT City near Pune.Over the next month, transactions on the anvil include a 20-acre
property in Bangalore, 15 acres in Chennai, and a tie-up with
a developer in six locations for land areas of over 25 acres
covering cities like Indore and Vadodara. Phew!To fund its aggressive ambition, ICICI is already thinking
of raising more money in the space. Says Renuka Ramnath, managing
director and CEO of ICICI Venture: "In the next two to three
years we expect to raise another $2.5 billion in the realty
space. Our expectation is to manage over $5 billion of real
estate assets in the next five years."But that is not the only area Ramnath and her team are putting
their hearts into. Buoyed by the success of its India Advantage
Fund, which returned 30-35 per cent on a compounded rate annually,
the company has just closed a deal to raise over $1 billion
for its India Advantage Fund II, the largest India-focused fund
in the private equity market, from which it will retain $850
million.At three times the size of the older fund, the new fund will
focus on two key areas - management buyouts, and assisting Indian
companies to acquire companies abroad, for which it will retain
50 per cent of the corpus.ICICI is also working on two new possibilities: a specialised
infrastructure fund, and a mezzanine fund for companies that
don't want to lose control and so offer a combination of debt
and equity against money.This week too it struck two deals - one to take a minority
equity positioning in GMR Infrastructure, which is developing
airports; and to put in Rs 35 crore (Rs 350 million) in Metropolis
Health Services, which owns a chain of diagnostic centres.More importantly, the new funds will give ICICI the cash for
mega-acquisition deals of $300 million plus {its biggest deal
so far has been Rs 260 crore (Rs 2.6 billion)}, an area where
it has been conspicuous by its absence so far. ICICI expects
the large fund will help it up the size of average deals to
$25-50 million.Explaining the new focus of the fund, Ramnath points out: "The
time is ripe for Indian companies to look abroad; as a fund,
we want to help them to do so. Secondly, with restructuring
in family businesses and corporates companies, they want to
concentrate on core areas and sell others. That, again, gives
us an opportunity to get in with management buyouts."With over $2 billion by way of assets under its management
- doubling its assets in four years - ICICI's target is to take
that up to $5 billion by 2010, placing it on the top of the
heap in the private equity capital market.In comparison, competitors like ChrysCapital handle assets
worth $1 billion, Actis has raised $475 million through two
funds targeted at India, the Carlyle group has stated it will
invest a substantial part of its Asia asset allocation of $1.6
billion in India.The only fund that has announced an allocation matching that
of ICICI is Blackstone, which has set aside $1 billion for investing
in India. Ramnath says that over the last two years private
equity funds undertook over 100 deals, of these, ICICI had a
20 per cent share of the market.How is ICICI doing things differently from competing international
private equity funds? One, it is holding equity in companies
for a much longer period (3-7 years with an average of 4-5 years)
rather than concentrating only on exit routes. The logic is
to provide companies the luxury of time to grow their business.Two, Ramnath says it is completely focused on India compared
to most international funds for whom only a small allocation
is reserved for the country. Three, it does not work with companies
where it doesn't have a say or where it doesn't own the transaction,
and so always looks at picking up at least a 20-30 per cent
stake and a role for growing the company (that is why it has
not got into telecom, for instance). And of course, it remains
more flexible and innovative in deal making, or so Ramnath says.That is reflected in its transactions. For instance, ICICI
undertook the management buyout of Austrian company V A Tech
Wabag, a turnkey engineering service company for water and wastewater
treatment.Says Rajiv Mittal, managing director of the company, "Unlike
international equity funds whose main question was the period
of the exit route, ICICI was focused on the company's growth
plans. Secondly, in our business, performance guarantees from
banks are key to get contracts, and the ICICI banking clout
helped."Ace Refractories, a business that was spun-off from ACC, sees
a lot of advantage in the ICICI deal. Says U C Deveshwar, managing
director, "Earlier, we were only 10 per cent of ACC's business,
so fund availability was limited. Now we are looking at domestic
acquisitions as well as a push in the international market.
As a result we are targeting a much higher topline growth of
25 per cent." ICICI offered almost 50 per cent more than any
of the refractory companies, a key reason why it did the deal.Similarly, understanding of the Indian needs led Dr Reddy's
to partner with ICICI rather than other competing funds. The
company had transferred some of the molecules under development
to a new company in which ICICI invested in the equity.Says G V Prasad, CEO in Dr Reddy's Lab, "It was a risk-mitigating
strategy for us as we were spending a lot on R&D and that
was affecting our bottomlines. International equity funds did
not understand our company like ICICI did, and it came up with
innovative structuring."Adds Prakash Iyer, managing director Infomedia India, a publishing
company which was bought over by ICICI: "We were earlier only
in print publishing, but now we have broadened our focus into
publishing BPO as well as e-publishing. ICICI helped us broaden
our vision." The fund also realised that many of its old investors wanted
to cash out rather than stay for the entire life of the fund,
but were stymied by the fact that there was no exit route. Indian
financial institutions (and they constitute 65 per cent of the
India Advantage Fund) were looking to book profits.ICICI found an innovative solution in creating a secondary
market for investors. It tied up with Coller Capital, which
bought part of the stakes of existing investors in a secondary
market operation. ICICI executives say that Indian institutions
booked 50 per cent of their profit through this route. The flexibility
helped ICICI rope in more investors in the new fund and it hit
the $1 billion figure quite easily.Still, critics suggest that ICICI has been too cautious, that
it is only looking at medium-sized companies. Points out a senior
executive of a rival equity fund, "ICICI is only looking at
small deals. Big returns come from taking on big deals as Warburg
did in Bharti; ICICI does not have the appetite for such size."Ramnath says the reason is simple. The size of its funds and
the fact that it wants a significant shareholding and say in
a company keeps it away from mega deals. Also, a large part
of its initial investors were Indian FIs who were testing the
waters for the first time, so that could change.She points out ICICI is now quite comfortable investing between
$75-100 million and roping in partners for acquiring large companies
through leveraging debt.In the realty business too, ICICI faces tough competition with
an array of new realty funds in the market. According to Cushman
& Wakefield, $2 billion have already been committed by various
funds for the next few months. A bevy of international realty
funds are seeking government permission.But Sanjay Verma, deputy managing director of Cushman &
Wakefield, cautions: "The Indian realty market lacks scale,
the number of deals is small, and there is a problem of clear
titled land." The other risk is, what will happen to these funds
should the real estate bubble burst? Is ICICI treading on dangerous
speculative territory?ICICI's response is a multi-pronged strategy. Ramnath says
it is bringing in institutional funding in an area that depended
on individual financiers, to create a long-term perspective
of the business rather than go from project to project. And
the risks are mitigated, she points out, by the fact that end-users
are corporates who lease out the property.The fund has begun by creating a land bank - it already has
300 acres and hopes to up it to 700 acres in the next two years.
Next, it is using a twin strategy for land development - either
through tying up with existing developers who do not have enough
cash to buy land, and fund them them through a joint venture.
Or to undertake the project on its own steam in a JV with US-based
realty developer Tishman with which it is developing the Hyderabad
and the proposed Bangalore projects.The gameplan is to have a mixed portfolio. Currently 65 per
cent of its land is in the metros, and the remaining in emerging
cities like Pune. The logic is simple: premium locations with
a premium building will always fetch a premium, and in case
of a downslide they can be liquidated easily.But to hedge against a downslide in its commercial space, ICICI
is focusing on property management or simply taking care of
the needs of its clients that have leased the space by ensuring
it caters to their requirements of expansion, or parking space,
for instance. Once these are taken care of, clients (who are
tied with nine-year leases) rarely want to move out.But that does not imply that ICICI will go in for premium pricing
in all its locations. In emerging cities it hopes to play the
pricing game to woo customers. In Pune, for instance, the company
hopes to create about 2,000 residential homes around either
an artificial lake or a golf course, thereby building a new
township on an investment of Rs 100 crore (Rs 1 billion).But the location is still a half-hour's drive from the city.
So in order to attract customers it hopes to hawk apartments
at around Rs 2,000 per sq ft, a discount of over 20 per cent
on Pune prices.To create more value, ICICI with its JV partner is planning
a triple whammy in Hyderabad - an upmarket shopping plaza and
office space, a five-star, 200-room hotel, and at least 40 service
apartments. Says a senior ICICI executive, "Hyderabad does not
have well-designed residential apartments and good corporate
office locations. That is what we will offer."Its sheer aggression is probably giving realty developers sleepless
nights, but with $1.4 billion by way of fresh cash in its kitty
ICICI is poised for the next big kill.What the Others are doing*
- Blackstone has said it will earmark $1 billion from its
various funds for India Actis has raised $475 million for investment in South Asia
through its India Fund II and South Asia Fund II ChrysCapital has raised two funds worth $800 million, taking
its total tally of funds managed to $1 billion The Carlyle group expects to invest part of its $1.6 billion
Asia asset allocation in India Henderson Asia Pacific Equity Partners has raised a $400
million pan Asian growth capital fund, which will invest in
India and Asean countries Temasek, the Singapore-based government supported equity
fund has been involved in big deals, forking out $360 million
to buy equity in Tata Teleservices and has made key investments
in ICICI, Matrix Labs and Apollo Hospitals
- IDFC Pvt Equity has recently raised $430 million for its
second fund IDFC Equity Fund II The earlier fund had
assets of $190 million
*based on public statements and assessment by industry
experts Courtsey rediff , edited
by www.sharetipsinfo.com team
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