ICICI Venture is planning to set up four new specialised funds, including a small-cap fund, a mezzanine fund, a hedge fund, and a fund of funds. |
The size of the small-cap fund will be around $500 million. It will begin with a corpus of $200-250 million, which will be hiked to that figure within the next nine months. |
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The mezzanine fund will have around $100 million. ICICI is yet to formalise the size or the timing of the other two funds. |
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ICICI Venture has also tied up with seven of its key investors in its private equity funds that will co-invest with them in acquisitions and buying of stakes in companies. |
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The need for a small-cap fund was felt because ICICI's current funds are for bigger deals, with an average size of $75 million. The small-cap fund will invest in smaller and emerging companies, which require a fund infusion of between $10 million and $50 million. |
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With many companies wanting expansion and fresh funds without losing control as a result of dilution of equity, ICICI also felt the need for a mezzanine fund, which would be a combination of debt and equity. It will protect promoters from losing control over their companies without compromising on growth. |
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As a part of its strategy to become a one-stop shop for investors, ICICI is looking at setting up a fund of funds, an equity fund that invests in other funds. A hedge fund (which will invest for a short period of time) is also being looked into. |
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At present, ICICI Venture handles assets of over $2 billion, and is the largest equity fund operating from India. ICICI hopes to double assets under its control to over $4 billion by 2010. |
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The existing assets include the $-810 India Advantage Fund 2, aimed at buyouts and growth capital for small as well as mid-size and large companies and a $-500 million real estate fund that is looking to join hands with developers for commercial as well as residential projects. |
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