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| Feature: Eastern Promise | ||||
| A Passage to India
Saritha Rai 09/01/2005 |
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When I first arrived, one needed a permit even to breathe,” recalls Robin
Farkas, former chairman and CEO of the now-defunct Alexander’s Department Store,
founded by his father, Alexander Farkas. The younger Farkas has been fascinated
by India’s potential since attending a wedding there in the 1980s. In his first
venture capital deal, involving a financial services firm he bought in the late
1990s and sold last year, Farkas doubled his money. It seemed like an
appropriate payoff for a strategy so long in the making.When he first came to India, Farkas quickly realized that he needed to learn how to navigate the country’s bureaucratic business and regulatory regimes, so he joined the board of a company domiciled there to gain experience. After learning the ropes, he teamed up with a colleague to launch a private equity firm, ICF Ventures, in 1996. By then the Indian authorities had whittled down the permitting process for establishing such such a fund: Farkas needed fewer than a half dozen approvals and he endured a waiting period of less than three months. Government officials have since
made progress; indeed, deregulation is one of the catalysts fueling the Indian
economy. The government’s GDP growth target this year is 8 percent; last year it
achieved 6.8 percent, a letdown from the eye-popping 8.4 percent growth in 2003.
(The United States trundled along at a respectable 4.4 percent in 2004.) Prime
Minister Manmohan Singh warned in June that the country might not meet its
target, but he gave assurances that the economy would grow at least 7
percent.Foreign private equity investors seeking to tap this rich vein are drawn ever more to India’s booming high-tech sector, which is increasingly being fueled by homegrown innovations in biotechnology and software rather than by IT outsourcing. Foreign investors are also rushing to grab a share of India’s real estate market, which became a particularly attractive option after the Indian government made strides in the slow process of deregulating the market this past March. However, moving capital into India remains expensive and bureaucratic. The present government, although democratically elected and
striving to foster a measure of economic transparency that would be unthinkable
under China’s authoritarian regime, seems ambivalent about shedding all of its
barriers to foreign ownership. The bureaucratic tangle has become an
embarrassment within the country, especially since the publication last year of
Governance and the Sclerosis That Has Set In, a book by Arun Shourie, a former
World Bank economist and the country’s privatization minister from 2000 to 2004.
Shourie’s scathing account includes his recollection of a yearlong wrangle he
witnessed during which steel ministry officials debated whether it was ever
appropriate to use red or green ink to sign documents.
Former investment banker Norman Prouty, who has lived and worked in Bangalore since the late 1990s, was also a cofounder of ICF Ventures. In that capacity he has helped to launch a number of entrepreneurial ventures in India, and he clearly feels that there are significant opportunities for investors: He has invested millions of his own capital into an ICF fund that he has incorporated in Mauritius. India imposes capital gains taxes on foreign investors, so nearly all investment funds incorporate in the small island off the coast of southern Africa, which has a tax treaty with India that grants exemptions to this levy. ICF claims to offer its investors average annual returns above 35 percent—slightly more than the average annual return for an Indian private equity fund—and is so successful that the principals anticipate limiting the next round of funding only to previous participants. Homegrown Wealth The expectation that the economy will grow by at least 7 percent this year, despite Shourie’s “sclerosis,” attests to the success of the technology sector and the growing pool of wealth it has generated. The services sector, including telecom and IT outsourcing, has been responsible for close to half of the 6.5 percent average annual growth rate over the past three years. But the greatest upside in the decade ahead is likely to be found in industries that address the development of the domestic infrastructure and consumer market. The manufacturing sector is expected to grow by 8.9 percent this year, with 90 percent of its output aimed at the domestic market, according to government figures. “Investors have an opportunity to really capitalize on India’s
evolution from an export-based outsourcing boom to a more indigenous growth
story in infrastructure and consumer products,” says Kammy Moalemzadeh, a
managing partner in the New York–based investment firm Arcadia Investment
Partners, who has put several million of his and his investors’ dollars into
private equity in India since 1999. As in China, private equity has become the
most popular route for wealthy investors who are willing to shoulder the
substantial risks of betting on unproven companies in return for the possibility
of doubling their money in three to 10 years. Whether the private equity
sector’s steroidal performances of recent years can continue is debatable,
however. “India has seen a dramatic run-up in the last five years when it was
discovered by foreign capital; that happens only once,” argues Ashish Dhawan, a
senior managing director of ChrysCapital Investment Advisors, a private equity
firm with offices in New Delhi and Palo Alto, Calif. The firm’s best picks have
returned as much as 500 percent.
Dhawan takes a conservative view of his firm’s recent success, attributing most of it to the overall investment climate. “While macroeconomic changes began in the early 1990s,” he says, “microeconomic changes, such as the dramatic growth in entrepreneurs’ aspirations, a global mindset and improved corporate governance, make India extremely attractive.” ChrysCapital is not currently raising capital, but might launch a round near the end of 2005. Indian hedge funds are generally more appropriate for investors seeking less volatility than those who can bear the risks of private equity. But, as in China, India lacks a sophisticated derivatives market, so investors must trust their capital to fund managers who seek to take directional bets in a market that trades heavily on rumors and relationships and is light on regulation, with little opportunity to hedge. Those with nimble, highly focused strategies have done well. Jon Thorn, managing director of the India Capital Fund, a London-based hedge fund with $150 million in assets, has seen some triple-digit returns since January from investments in small-cap manufacturing companies. He recently announced that the fund will reduce its holdings in export-driven sectors such as software and pharmaceuticals, which he sees as vulnerable to a U.S. slowdown, and focus on domestic consumption-driven sectors. Local Flavor Yet in spite of the
sluggish Indian index, the track records of individual large-caps that have
ventured overseas have impressed in the past year, especially the stocks of
bellwether software services firms—Infosys Technologies (INFY), up 71 percent;
Wipro (WIT), up 42 percent; and Satyam Computer Services (SAY), up 26 percent.
These firms continue to project 30 to 40 percent growth in annual profits.
Property Rights and Wrongs The demand for both commercial and residential real estate is booming. But foreign investment remains a daunting proposition. Real estate transactions were not open to foreigners until this past March. Now foreigners can own property outright, but only parcels of 10,000 acres—nearly 16 square miles—or more. These might encompass office parks, resorts, even special economic zones for low-tax offshore production. Perhaps a more pragmatic way for foreign investors to participate is through a professionally managed, diversified capital pool. Funds specializing in the booming hotel sector include Brooke International Fund, Dalmia Capital Fund, Indian Real Estate Opportunities Fund and the Merlion Fund of Temasek Holdings. A number of Indian banks, including ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank, are contemplating floating real estate venture funds open to foreigners. Bear in mind that all the funds above are new, and must be approached with caution. A number of international property advisors, including Jones Lang LaSalle, Cushman & Wakefield, Knight Frank and CB Richard Ellis, have offices in India to counsel foreign investors on regulatory issues. Many
private equity funds and real estate funds are eyeing opportunities in large
infrastructure projects. The Singh government is trying to attract money to
modernize a country in which so many vast stretches are trapped in the
developing world. Large cities are currently making do with airports that appear
more like American Greyhound bus stations with runways, as well as with
traffic-clogged roads and acute energy shortages. Saritha Rai is a Bangalore, India-based business writer. |